Behind on Your Books? Here’s How to Get Ready for Tax Season (Without the Stress)

Mar 18, 2026

If your books aren’t quite ready for tax season… you’re not alone.

In fact, this is one of the most common conversations I have this time of year. Business owners are busy running their business, and bookkeeping tends to fall to the bottom of the list — until tax season shows up.

The good news? It’s fixable. And it doesn’t have to be overwhelming.

Let’s walk through what “being ready” actually means — and how to get there.

 

First — Take a Breath

Before we get into the details, it’s worth saying this:

Falling behind on your books doesn’t mean you’ve done anything wrong. It usually means:

• You’ve been focused on serving clients
• You’ve outgrown your current system
• Or life simply got busy

Wherever you are right now, you can move forward from here.

 

What Does “Ready for Tax Season” Actually Mean?

When your books are in good shape, your CPA should be able to quickly pull what they need without chasing down missing pieces.

At a minimum, that means:

• All transactions are categorized (income and expenses)
• Bank and credit card accounts are reconciled
• You have a clean Profit & Loss and Balance Sheet

That’s it. Not perfection — just clarity and accuracy.

 

A Simple 4-Step Plan to Get Caught Up

If you’re behind, here’s a straightforward way to approach it:

1. Gather Your Accounts

Make sure all of your financial accounts are connected or accounted for:

• Business bank accounts
• Credit cards
• Loans or lines of credit
• Payment processors (Stripe, PayPal, etc.)

If something is missing, your books will always feel “off.”

 

2. Categorize Your Transactions

Go through your transactions and assign them to the right categories.

This is where a lot of people get stuck — and that’s normal. Focus on getting things mostly right, not perfect. You can always refine later.

 

3. Reconcile Your Accounts

This step confirms that what’s in your bookkeeping software matches your actual bank and credit card balances.

If you skip this, errors can quietly build up — even if everything looks okay on the surface.

 

4. Review Your Reports

Once everything is categorized and reconciled, take a look at:

• Profit & Loss
• Balance Sheet

Ask yourself:

• Does the income seem reasonable?
• Are there any obvious duplicates or missing items?
• Do the balances make sense?

You don’t need to analyze everything — just make sure it passes a basic “sanity check.”

 

Common Issues I See (and Fix All the Time)

If you’re feeling stuck, it’s often because of one of these:

• Duplicate transactions from bank feeds
• Missing income from payment platforms
• Old or unused accounts cluttering things up
• Mixing personal and business expenses
• Uncategorized transactions piling up over time

None of these are unusual — but they do need to be cleaned up before tax filing.

 

When It Might Make Sense to Get Help

Sometimes it’s faster (and less stressful) to hand this off.

You might want support if:

• You’re more than a few months behind
• You have multiple accounts or funding sources
• You’re unsure if things are accurate
• Or you simply don’t want to spend your time on this

That’s exactly where cleanup work comes in — getting everything organized so you can move forward with confidence.

 

You Don’t Have to Untangle It Alone

Getting your books ready for tax season doesn’t require perfection — just a clear, accurate picture of your finances.

If you want help getting there, I’m always happy to take a look and point you in the right direction (even if it’s just a quick conversation).

Either way, the sooner you start, the easier it gets.

Let’s Talk