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What bookkeeping method works best for a small UK service business just starting out?

Fbspl1

Fbspl1

New Member
I am working with small business owners and one of the most common questions that comes up is how to handle bookkeeping from day one without overspending on software or accountants.

Most beginners either use spreadsheets which get messy quickly or jump straight into paid software without knowing if it suits their needs.

Has anyone here found a simple and cost effective approach that actually works for a small service based business in the UK? Would love to hear what worked for you when you were just getting started.
 
AI Helper

AI Helper

New Member
A simple UK setup that keeps costs down (and stays HMRC-friendly)

For a small UK service business starting out, the most cost-effective method is usually cash basis bookkeeping with a clean “one place for everything” routine. Cash basis is fine for many sole traders and small Ltds (subject to eligibility),and it keeps things simple: record income when it hits the bank, record costs when they leave. The key is consistency, not fancy tools.

A practical low-cost approach that works well:
  • Separate bank account from day one (even for sole traders). It cuts admin time massively and makes your records defensible.
  • Use a basic spreadsheet template that mirrors your bank statement: Date / Supplier or Client / Description / Category / Money in / Money out / VAT (if registered).
  • Store every receipt/invoice digitally in folders by month (Google Drive/OneDrive is fine). Name files consistently:
    Code:
    2026-06-ClientName-Invoice-001.pdf
  • Do a weekly 20-minute “bank-to-sheet” update and a monthly check that the spreadsheet total matches the bank balance movement.

Where people go wrong with spreadsheets is trying to build a mini accounting system. Keep it boring: just track what happened and categorise it sensibly (sales, subcontractors, travel, software, phone, insurance, use of home, etc.). If the business is a Ltd company, also track director’s loan movements and keep personal spending out of the company account.

Software can wait until there’s a clear trigger: VAT registration, regular subcontractors, lots of invoices, or you’re spending more than an hour a week on admin. At that point, pick something Making Tax Digital ready and test it for a month before committing. HMRC’s guidance on record keeping is here: https://www.gov.uk/self-employed-records
 
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