If you run your own business, you’ve probably heard both terms used — sometimes interchangeably. But bookkeeping and accountancy are different things, and understanding the distinction can help you work out exactly what support your business needs.
What Is Bookkeeping?
Bookkeeping is the day-to-day process of recording all financial transactions in your business. Every sale, purchase, payment, and receipt gets logged — accurately and consistently — so that your financial records are always up to date.
A bookkeeper’s job includes:
- Recording income and expenses
- Reconciling bank statements
- Managing invoices and receipts
- Tracking what you’re owed and what you owe
- Keeping records in MTD-compatible software such as QuickBooks or Xero
- Preparing VAT returns
Bookkeeping is primarily about accuracy and organisation. It keeps your financial records clean, current, and compliant — which makes everything else much easier. Read our guide on what expenses sole traders can claim to see how good bookkeeping helps you capture every allowable deduction.
What Is Accountancy?
Accountancy takes the records that bookkeeping produces and uses them for higher-level financial work. An accountant analyses, interprets, and reports on your financial data — and provides advice based on it.
An accountant’s work typically includes:
- Preparing end of year accounts
- Filing Self Assessment tax returns
- Tax planning and advice
- Identifying ways to reduce your tax liability legally
- Business financial planning
- Advising on VAT, MTD, and other compliance matters
Accountancy is more strategic than bookkeeping — it’s about making sense of your numbers and using them to make better decisions.
How Do They Work Together?
Good bookkeeping makes accountancy much easier and cheaper. When your records are accurate and up to date, your accountant spends less time sorting through paperwork and more time on the work that actually adds value — like spotting tax savings or helping you plan ahead.
Think of bookkeeping as the foundation. Accountancy is what’s built on top of it.
| Bookkeeping | Accountancy | |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Recording transactions | Analysis and advice |
| Frequency | Ongoing / daily | Periodic / year-end |
| Output | Accurate financial records | Accounts, tax returns, advice |
| Skills | Accuracy, organisation | Analysis, tax knowledge |
Do You Need Both?
Most sole traders and small businesses benefit from both — but the level of support needed varies. If you’re just starting out with a straightforward business and simple finances, you might manage basic bookkeeping yourself and only bring in an accountant for your year-end accounts and Self Assessment.
As your business grows — or if you’re VAT-registered, have employees, or need to comply with Making Tax Digital — having professional bookkeeping support in place becomes much more valuable. You can read more about Self Assessment penalties and how to avoid them to understand why staying on top of your records matters.
How PBAS Helps
At PBAS, we offer both bookkeeping and accountancy services for sole traders, freelancers, and small businesses. Whether you need someone to keep your day-to-day records in order, handle your VAT returns, prepare your end of year accounts, or file your Self Assessment — we can help with any or all of it. We use QuickBooks and Xero, and all our work is fully MTD-compatible.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.