Redding, CA · 14 months behind
14 months of uncategorized transactions
Bank accounts never reconciled
No idea if business is profitable
CPA needs clean books to file taxes
After cleanup, Susan can transition to ongoing monthly bookkeeping, prepare your tax return, or hand you back a clean file — your choice.
Describe where your books stand — how far behind, what software you’re on, what happened. No commitment, no judgment. Susan will tell you if catch-up is the right fit or if something else makes more sense.
Susan reviews your QuickBooks file or bank statements, scopes the work, and delivers a fixed-fee quote before any cleanup begins. The quote is based on actual scope — months behind and transaction volume — not a guessed hourly estimate.
Categorization, reconciliation, error correction, and chart of accounts cleanup — done to the standards a tax return requires. Susan communicates along the way if anything unusual turns up that affects scope or decisions you need to make.
When cleanup is complete, Susan walks you through what was found, what was corrected, and where your business actually stands. Clean financial statements are delivered. From here, you can transition to ongoing bookkeeping, have Susan prepare your taxes, or take the clean file wherever you need it.
Honest pricing requires seeing what’s actually there. Every cleanup quote comes after a diagnostic review — not from a rate sheet. Scope is driven by two variables: how many months are behind, and how many transactions are in those months.
Describe your situation — how far behind, what platform you’re on. No commitment required.
Scope is defined up front. No open-ended hourly billing, no surprise invoice when the project closes.
Most small business cleanups with fewer than 18 months of backlog fall in this range. Larger or more complex situations are quoted directly after review.
Cleanup is not a recurring service. When the books are clean, the project is closed. No ongoing charge unless you choose to continue with bookkeeping.
After cleanup, Susan can transition into monthly bookkeeping, prepare your individual or business tax return, or simply hand you back a clean file. Your call.
Susan codes every transaction with deductibility in mind. Not just “what account does this go in” but “what does this cost you at tax time if it’s wrong.”
Two years behind, four years behind, never reconciled, inherited from a previous owner — none of it is unusual. The goal is a clean file, not a verdict on how it got this way.
Cleanup is scoped after a file review, not guessed at. You know the cost before anything starts — no hourly billing that grows as the work turns out to be larger than expected.
When cleanup is done, you get a walkthrough: what was corrected, what was discovered, where your business stands. Not a black box — a briefing.
There’s no upper limit. Susan has handled cleanups spanning multiple years of backlog — businesses that were never reconciled, books inherited from prior owners, files that hadn’t been touched in three or four years. The scope determines the price; it doesn’t determine whether the work is possible. If the bank statements exist, the cleanup can be done.
Bank and credit card statements are enough to reconstruct the books. Susan can build the file from scratch using statements, receipt records, and any documentation you have. QuickBooks Online or Desktop is the preferred platform, but cleanup can begin from raw bank data if that’s what you have.
Most small business cleanups are completed within 4–8 weeks, depending on the backlog length and transaction volume. Simple cleanups — a business with 100–150 transactions per month, 6–12 months behind — often take two to three weeks. Larger files or multi-year backlogs take longer, and the timeline is discussed before work begins.
Some services charge a per-month rate for cleanup — which works if the scope is clear up front but can produce estimates that don’t reflect the actual complexity inside those months. Susan scopes each cleanup after reviewing the file: months behind, average transaction volume, complexity of the chart of accounts, and whether prior errors need to be unwound. The result is a single fixed fee for the entire project — not a per-month rate that grows as the file turns out to be messier than expected.
Yes — and it’s often the most efficient path. When Susan does the cleanup, she already knows the file, understands what was found, and has the context to prepare an accurate return without starting from scratch. Individual tax preparation and business tax preparation are both available as a natural next step after cleanup.
Catch-up bookkeeping is a one-time project with a defined start and end: you come in behind, cleanup is done, project closes. Ongoing bookkeeping is a monthly recurring service that keeps the books current going forward. Many clients do a catch-up first, then transition to ongoing bookkeeping so the backlog problem never returns. Others just need the one-time cleanup and manage the books themselves after that.
No — and it’s worth saying directly. The books being behind is one of the most common situations Susan sees. It’s almost never about negligence; it’s usually about running a business without enough hours in the day. Catch-up bookkeeping is a judgment-free service. The only thing that matters is getting the file clean.
Yes. Correcting prior-period errors is a standard part of cleanup. That includes reclassifying transactions coded to the wrong account, fixing opening balances that were set incorrectly, removing phantom or duplicate entries, and unwinding journal entries that don’t reflect what actually happened. If there are errors that affect a prior tax year, Susan will flag them and advise on whether an amended return makes sense.