The email shows up in March. Your tax preparer needs a profit and loss statement, a balance sheet, and a few reconciled bank statements. You stare at the screen. You have a shoebox of receipts, a folder of bank statements, and a vague sense that QuickBooks is open somewhere on your laptop. You are not sure what any of those reports actually are, and you are definitely not sure where to get them. If that paragraph describes the last week of your life, you are in the right place. The team at Adroit Bookkeeping in Beaver, Utah, has this conversation with small business owners every spring, and the good news is that most of the panic is fixable.
What a Tax Preparer Is Actually Asking For
Tax preparers ask for the same handful of reports because they need a consistent picture of your business before they can file. The reports are not arbitrary. Each one answers a specific question, and the IRS expects your return to reflect the answers accurately.
A profit and loss statement, often shortened to P&L or income statement, tells the preparer how much revenue your business brought in and how much it spent over a period of time. The bottom line is your net profit or loss. That number drives most of the tax calculation on your return.
A balance sheet is a snapshot of what your business owns, what it owes, and what the difference is on a specific date. Assets on one side. Liabilities and owner’s equity on the other. The two sides have to match, which is where the term balance comes from. Tax preparers often need a year-end balance sheet to make sure depreciation, loans, and owner contributions or draws are reported correctly.
A bank reconciliation confirms that your books match your bank. Every deposit, every check, every electronic transaction in your accounting system is matched against the statement from your bank. When the two agree, the reconciliation is clean. When they do not, something is missing or duplicated, and any report built on those numbers will be off.
A general ledger is the detailed record behind everything. It is the source data for the P&L and the balance sheet. Most preparers do not ask for the full ledger unless they are checking a specific entry.
Why a Shoebox of Receipts Is Not the Same Thing
A common misconception is that handing over a year’s worth of receipts and bank statements is the same as handing over the reports the preparer asked for. It is not. Receipts are evidence of individual transactions. Reports summarize, categorize, and reconcile those transactions into a picture of the business.
Turning raw receipts into a usable P&L requires sorting each transaction into the right category, matching it against the bank record, and confirming that nothing has been missed or double counted. That work is bookkeeping. When the bookkeeping has been done throughout the year, the reports already exist and can be exported in a few minutes. When the bookkeeping has not been done, the work has to happen all at once, under deadline, often at a premium price.
The Cost of Catching Up Under Pressure
Catching up a year’s worth of books in March or April is more expensive than keeping them current month by month, for several reasons. Memory fades. By the time you are looking at a transaction from August, you may not remember whether the $400 charge at the home improvement store was for a job site or for your house. Vendors disappear. Some of the providers who could have answered a question in real time may no longer respond a year later. Tax filing deadlines compress the work into a window where every bookkeeper and accountant in the country is already busy, which raises the price and lowers the chance that the work gets done before the deadline.
The other cost is harder to measure. A rushed catch-up almost always leaves something on the table. Deductions get missed. Expenses get categorized in ways that increase the tax bill. Reconciliations get glossed over in the interest of finishing on time. The result is often a higher tax bill than the business actually owes.
What Clean Books Look Like at Tax Time
A business with current books hands the tax preparer four things without panic. A profit and loss statement for the year. A balance sheet as of December 31. Reconciled bank and credit card statements for every month. A short note about any unusual transactions, like a new loan, a vehicle purchase, or a draw the owner took. The whole package can be put together in a single email, and the preparer can usually finish the return without follow-up questions.
That is what bookkeeping that runs all year looks like in practice. Each month, the transactions are categorized. Each month, the bank and credit card accounts are reconciled. Each quarter, the reports get a quick review to make sure the picture matches the business. By the time April rolls around, the work is already done.
How Adroit Bookkeeping Helps Small Business Owners Get Out of the Spring Scramble
The team at Adroit Bookkeeping works with small business owners who want their books done correctly without having to learn an accounting program themselves. That includes setting up the system if it has never been set up, catching up the books if the year got away from you, and running the monthly bookkeeping going forward so that the next April does not look like this one.
Back office services like accounts payable, accounts receivable, and payroll often get folded into the same engagement, since the same data is feeding the same reports either way. The Internal Revenue Service publishes general guidance on recordkeeping requirements at irs.gov for owners who want to read the underlying expectations, and the Small Business Administration at sba.gov has additional material on financial management basics.
A Calmer April Is Possible
If the email from your tax preparer set off this week’s small crisis, the fix is straightforward. Get the year caught up cleanly. Decide whether you want to keep handling the books yourself or hand them off so that next spring is a routine handoff rather than a fire drill. A short conversation with Adroit Bookkeeping can tell you exactly where your records stand, what it would take to get them tax ready, and what monthly bookkeeping would look like going forward. Reach out for a free quote and find out what a calmer April actually feels like.
