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Top 3 Small Business Accounting Mistakes To Avoid

<p>Did you know that the average small business is fined between &dollar;900 and &dollar;2000 for bookkeeping and filing errors they make throughout the tax year&period; For a large&comma; multinational corporation&comma; these fines may be pennies&period; But for a small business who relies on every penny it earns&comma; these fines can add up very quickly&period; The United States Tax Code can be extremely complicated&comma; especially for business owners who did not go to school to be accountants&period; And when you make mistakes&comma; the IRS will be far from understanding&period; Read on to find out the top 3 accounting mistakes made and how you&comma; as a small business owner&comma; can avoid making these mistakes&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Using the Wrong Accounting Method Based on the Size of Your Business<&sol;strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;When you open your doors&comma; you need to decide which accounting method you are going to use and stick with that method throughout the entire tax year&period; In the world of business accounting&comma; there are two different accounting methods you can choose from&colon; cash accounting and accrual accounting&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;If you do not have an inventory&comma; you are a service provider&comma; or you are a sole proprietor&comma; opting to go with the cash method is best&period; Most small business owners will opt to choose cash accounting methods because it is simpler and only takes transactions into account when cash changes hands&period; But as your business grows and you need funding&comma; lenders and finance managers want to see the difference between your revenues and your expenses&period; This is when accrual accounting comes into play&period; With accrual accounting&comma; you can match revenues and expenses and see which months you profit and which months you do not&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Mixing Your Personal Expenses and Business Expenses <&sol;strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;When you own a small business&comma; your personal finances are separate from your business finances&period; Failing to separate the two can cause major problems with the IRS&period; You need to take time to keep everything that is personal separate at all times&comma; even if you are the only person working for your company&period; Make sure you have a business checking account&comma; deposit your business income into your business account&comma; and reinvest back into your company&period; Once you see how much you earn each cycle&comma; you can determine how much you need to earn to cover expenses&comma; take home pay&comma; and reinvest in your business&period; If you fail to separate personal expenses&comma; business expenses&comma; and income&comma; filing your taxes will become more than just an annoying chore&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Bank Account Reconciliation <&sol;strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;All large businesses require their chain managers to perform a bank account reconciliation on a weekly or monthly basis&period; You should follow suit and make sure that you are doing this as well&period; When you perform a reconciliation&comma; all you are doing is comparing your bank statements to your books to verify that all of the balances and deposits match&period; If you do find discrepancies&comma; you should contact your bank immediately to resolve the problem&period; Doing this each and every month right when you receive your bank statements can save you a big headache when it comes time to file your taxes&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Accounting mistakes can cost you more than just time&comma; they can cost you money&period; As you may know from experience&comma; problems with the IRS do not go away&comma; they simply become compounded&period; Make sure you do everything in your power to keep your books up-to-date throughout the year and avoid making these common yet costly mistakes&period; If you do your own accounting or you hire a professional&comma; review everything to make sure these are mistakes that you have taken time to avoid and you will have peace of mind&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h5>Attached Images&colon;<&sol;h5>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li> <span class&equals;"license">License&colon; Creative Commons<&sol;span> <span class&equals;"source">image source<&sol;span><&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>Reggie Dalton is a corporate accountant and guest author at Master of Accounting&comma; where he contributed to the Top 10 Best Online Master of Accounting Degree Programs&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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