Guide · Catch-Up Plan
Every month you're behind feels heavier than the last. The fix is a sequence, not a heroic weekend. Seven steps, in order, with an honest rule for when to stop doing it yourself.
By Tristan Albach, Intuit QuickBooks ProAdvisor · Updated
Before touching the backlog, stop it growing. Starting today, business spending goes through business accounts only. Mixed personal and business spending is the single biggest thing that makes catch-up work slow and expensive, and it's the one factor you control immediately.
Bank accounts, credit cards, payment processors, loan statements: every month of the backlog. Export CSV or Excel files where your bank offers them, and download PDFs now even if that's all your bank has. Retrieval only gets harder as accounts age or close.
For most small businesses that's QuickBooks Online, in your own subscription, under your own ownership. A spreadsheet can hold three tidy months. It cannot hold a year of catch-up plus your future.
The order matters. Each month's ending balance is the next month's starting point, so an error in March silently corrupts everything after it. Import, categorize, reconcile to the statement, and only then advance. Reconciliation is the checkpoint that keeps one mistake from becoming twelve.
If a charge repeats every month, it gets its own category. Software, rent, insurance, phone: recurring items are where reports become useful. Everything truly one-off can live in broader categories. Label the mystery transfers and checks now, while there's any chance you remember them.
The honest threshold: under about three months behind, one or two accounts, no commingling? DIY is realistic in a focused weekend. Past a year, or with mixed accounts, DIY catch-up usually builds a second mess on top of the first. That's the point where a professional cleanup costs less than your time plus the rework.
The backlog came from not having a monthly habit. Buy the habit: a monthly close, reconciled accounts, statements you actually read. That's what monthly bookkeeping is, and it starts at $150 per month.
What handing it off costs
Our cleanup pricing is published in full: $0.50 to $1.00 per transaction depending on four complexity factors, plus a $250 discovery fee, plus 10% per full year of backlog. A typical two-year, 2,000-transaction catch-up lands near $2,460. The full formula with worked examples is here, including the four things you can do to lower your own quote.
The honest answer: it depends on volume, accounts, and data format, and the biggest delay is usually waiting on banks for old statements. Gathering everything before work starts is the single best way to shorten it.
Messy books aren't a violation by themselves. The danger is downstream: late or wrong filings, deductions you can't document anymore, estimated payments built on guesses. Catch up before tax season, not during it. For specific penalty situations, ask a CPA.
You can, and you'll regret it. Unreconciled books look done and aren't: duplicates, missing transactions, and bank errors hide until reconciliation exposes them. It's the difference between books that look right and books you can rely on.
Request them from the bank now; most provide several years of history, though closed accounts get harder. Gaps that truly can't be filled get reconstructed from the surrounding months and flagged transparently. Don't let one missing month stop the other eleven.
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