Tag Archive for: accountants

Your Business Isn’t Bad With Money. It Just Needs a Better System

How to build a simple business finance system 🙌

Ever looked at your business bank account and thought:

“I’m sure there should be more in there than that…”

You’re not alone.

And before you start mentally putting yourself in the “bad with money” category, let’s stop that little spiral right there.

Most business owners are not bad with money.

They’re busy.

They’re making decisions every day, dealing with clients, managing staff, keeping work moving, replying to messages, solving problems and occasionally trying to remember whether they’ve eaten lunch.

So, if your business finances feel messy, it does not automatically mean you are doing everything wrong.

It probably just means your business finance systems need a bit of love.

Not a dramatic overhaul.
Not a finance personality transplant.
Not a Sunday afternoon spent making your life more complicated than it needs to be.

Just a few simple habits and checks that help you understand what is coming in, what is going out, what is actually yours, and what HMRC may already have its eye on.

Lovely stuff.

First things first: your bank balance is not the full story 👀

Your bank balance is useful, of course.

But it is not the full financial picture of your business.

It can tell you how much money is sitting there today, but it does not tell you:

– What invoices have actually been paid
– What bills are due next week
– What tax needs setting aside
– Whether you are making enough profit
– Whether your prices still make sense
– Whether your cash flow is about to get a little dramatic

This is why business owners can feel like things are going well one minute, then completely blindsided the next.

One moment, the account looks healthy.

The next, payroll lands. A supplier invoice appears. A tax payment pops up. A quiet sales patch decides to make itself known.

Suddenly, the money that looked available is very much not available.

Rude.

But this does not always happen because the money is not there.

Sometimes, it happens because the visibility is not there.

And when you cannot clearly see what is happening, your brain starts filling in the gaps.

Usually with panic (very helpful of it…)

Why better business finance systems give you breathing room 🌿

A good finance system does not need to be fancy.

It just needs to answer the questions that matter.

Things like:

– How much money is coming in?
– How much money is going out?
– What do I owe?
– What is owed to me?
– What needs putting aside?
– What can I safely take from the business?
– What decisions do I need to make before this becomes a problem?

That is the point of strong business finance systems.

They are not there to make you feel like you are back at school being told off for not showing your working.

They are there to give you breathing room.

Because when you understand your numbers, you can make calmer decisions.

You can spot problems earlier.

You can plan for tax before it arrives wearing a little villain cape.

You can make better choices about pricing, hiring, investing and spending.

You can stop relying on “I think we’re okay?” as a financial strategy.

The problem with keeping everything in your head 🧠

A lot of business owners carry far too much financial information in their head.

  • Invoice reminders.
  • Client payments.
  • Upcoming bills.
  • VAT dates.
  • Payroll.
  • Supplier costs.
  • That subscription they keep meaning to cancel.
  • The tax money that is technically in the account but absolutely not for touching.

No wonder your brain feels like it has 47 tabs open and one of them is playing music.

The issue is not that you are incapable of managing your business finances.

The issue is that your head is not a system.

It is already doing enough.

A proper finance system takes some of that mental load away. It gives you somewhere to put the information so you are not trying to remember everything while also running the actual business.

That is where the calm starts to come in.

Not because the numbers magically become perfect, but because they become clearer.

And clearer numbers are much easier to deal with than mysterious numbers lurking in the background like a tax-themed ghost.

So, what should your system actually include?

Let’s keep this practical.

A useful finance system should help you check a few key things regularly.

Nothing scary. Nothing wildly complicated.

Just the kind of information that helps you feel more in control of the business you are already working incredibly hard to run.

1. What is coming in? 💷

This sounds obvious, but it is surprising how many business owners do not have a clear habit for checking expected income.

You want to know:

– Which invoices have been sent
– Which invoices have been paid
– Which invoices are overdue
– What work is booked in
– What income is expected over the next few weeks or months

This helps you avoid making decisions based on what you hope is coming in, rather than what is actually confirmed.

2. What is going out? 📉

The money leaving your business matters just as much as the money coming in.

That includes investments like:

– Software and subscriptions
– Wages
– Rent or premises costs
– Supplier payments
– Insurance
– Marketing
– Loan repayments
– Equipment
– Professional fees
– Tax savings

Or, random “small” costs that become less small when there are 19 of them.

It is very easy for costs to creep up quietly.

One new tool here.

One subscription there.

One “we’ll just keep that running for now.”

Then suddenly, your monthly costs have grown legs and wandered off with your profit.

A regular review helps you catch that before it becomes a bigger issue.

3. What money is actually yours? 👛

This is a big one.

Because your bank account might look healthy, but not all of that money is yours to spend.

Some of it may need to be set aside for tax.

Some may be needed for wages.

Some may already be committed to bills.

Some may be needed to keep cash flow steady during quieter periods.

This is where business owners can get caught out.

The account looks fine, so you take money out, invest in something or breathe a sigh of relief.

Then the next round of payments lands and suddenly everyone is having a less relaxing time.

A good system helps you separate “money in the account” from “money available to use.”

And that difference matters.

4. What does profit actually look like? 📊

Revenue is exciting.

Profit is the bit we need to pay attention to.

Because a business can be busy, popular and bringing in money, but still not be as profitable as it should be.

That can happen when:

– Prices are too low
– Costs have increased
– Jobs take longer than expected
– Discounts are being used too often
– Staff time is not being factored in properly
– The business is growing, but the structure has not caught up

This is why checking profit regularly is so important.

Not because anyone wants to ruin the joy of a good sales month.

But because sales alone do not tell you whether the business is genuinely working.

Profit gives you the clearer picture.

5. What decisions are your numbers trying to help you make? ✅

Your numbers are not just there for tax returns.

They are there to help you make better business decisions.

For example:

Can you afford to hire?

Do you need to increase prices?

Is a certain service still worth offering?

Are you relying too heavily on one client?

Are your costs growing faster than your income?

Do you have enough cash to invest?

Is your business actually moving in the direction you want?

This is where good financial support can make a huge difference.

Because it is one thing to have the numbers.

It is another thing to understand what they are telling you.

And it is another thing entirely to know what to do next.

A simple monthly finance habit for business owners

If your finances currently feel messy, do not try to fix everything at once.

That is how people end up overwhelmed, annoyed and making a cup of tea instead.

Start with one simple monthly habit.

Set aside time each month to check👇

– What came in
– What went out
– What is overdue
– What tax needs putting aside
– What bills are coming up
– What profit looks like
– What needs your attention next month

That alone can make a huge difference.

Not because it solves every problem instantly, but because it gives you awareness.

And awareness is where better decisions start.

You do not need to obsess over your numbers.

You just need to stop avoiding them until they become loud.

When should you ask for help?

Ideally, before everything feels chaotic.

But we know that is not always how business works.

You should speak to your accountant if:

– You are not sure where your money is going
– You feel busy but not profitable
– You are worried about tax bills
– You do not know how much you can safely take from the business
– Your costs have increased and you are not sure what to do
– You are growing and need better visibility
– You want your numbers explained in actual human language

Because accounting support should not just be about filing things on time.

It should help you feel more confident about your business.

It should help you understand what is happening, what needs attention and what decisions will help you move forward.

(Preferably without making you want to hide under the desk).

If you only take one thing away, let it be this

Your business finances do not need to be perfect to be manageable.

You do not need to know every answer.

You do not need to become obsessed with reports.

You do not need to feel embarrassed if things have got a bit messy.

You just need a system that gives you clarity.

Because when your numbers are easier to understand, your business becomes easier to run.

And that is the whole point.

Not perfection.

Just less panic, better decisions and fewer moments where you stare at your bank account like it personally betrayed you.

👇 Want the full Q2 plan of attack?

If you want a simple, practical plan for the quarter ahead (without loads of noise), sign up to Sumthing To Say.

It’s our quarterly newsletter for business owners who want to scale sustainably and successfully — with resources, reminders and everything you need to help you stay on track in Q2.

👉 Sign up to Sumthing To Say here

Do you need your accounts taken care of for you? You can Book a Discovery Call here.

Al, Dave & the ChadStone Team




The 90-Day Business Reset You’re Missing Out On

April is the perfect time for a 90-day reset.

It’s the start of Q2, the new year’s motivation has long passed, and the weather is finally improving, making all of us feel better.

You don’t need a dramatic reinvention, a new planner or a vision board session with scented candles (but if that helps you then by all means).

All you actually need is these 5 steps!

And you can do all of these in one afternoon, with a mug of tea, without turning your business into corporate nonsense (winner, winner!)

✅ Step 1: The “what’s actually going on?” check 📊

Before you plan anything new, get a quick grip on the basics.

💷 1) Cash + tax pot check

  • What’s in the bank today?
  • What’s due in and out over the next few weeks?
  • Have you ringfenced tax money… or is it still in the main account pretending it’s available?

If tax money isn’t in a separate pot yet, this is the moment. You don’t need a perfect percentage — you just need it not to be “whatever’s left at the end” 😅

📈 2) Pipeline + capacity check

Ask yourself two questions:

  • What work is coming in over the next 30–60 days?
  • Do we actually have the time/people to deliver it properly?

A lot of Q2 stress comes from taking on work because it looks good, then realising you don’t have the capacity to deliver it without everyone suffering.

🧾 3) The “cost creep” audit

Costs rarely explode. They creep.

Go through your last 1–3 months’ outgoings and look for:

  • Subscriptions you forgot you had
  • Supplier costs that have risen quietly
  • Expenses that have become “normal”
  • Any regular spend you can’t actually explain

Your mission isn’t to become a minimalist. 

It’s just to stop paying for things out of habit.

✅ Step 2: The pricing check (the one everyone avoids) 😬

Pricing is one of those things business owners put off because it feels awkward.

But here’s the truth: if your costs have gone up and your pricing hasn’t moved, your margin is shrinking… even if sales are strong.

A quick Q2 pricing check:

  • When did you last put prices up?
  • Have supplier / wage / overhead costs increased since then?
  • Are you doing “little extras” that take time but don’t get paid for?

If you’re busy but not better off, pricing is usually where the answer lives.

✅ Step 3: Fix your meetings so they stop stealing your week 🗓️

If your weekly meetings end with “good chat”… but nothing changes… you’ll be having the same meeting next week.

A simple rule we swear by:

Every meeting ends with:

– What we decided

– What happens next

– Who owns it (one person, not “we’ll all keep an eye on it”)

If it’s not owned, it floats.

If it floats, it becomes urgent later.

And urgent later is always more stressful than “sorted now”.

✅ Step 4: The “stop doing” list ✋

This is the part that makes Q2 feel lighter.

Most people create a to-do list and keep adding to it until everything feels urgent.

A stop-doing list is the opposite.

Write down 3 things you’re actively pausing or saying no to in Q2.

Examples:

  • A project that isn’t urgent
  • A client type that drains time
  • Work you keep doing “to be helpful” that isn’t paid
  • Meetings that exist out of habit

You don’t need more on your plate this quarter.

You need fewer things pretending to be essential.

✅ Step 5: Your Q2 “plan of attack” (simple version) 🎯

You don’t need a 50-point strategy document.

You need three things:

1) One focus for Q2

What’s the ONE thing that would make this quarter feel successful?

Examples:

  • More profitable work (not just more work)
  • Better reporting / visibility
  • A calmer delivery process
  • Sorting cashflow so it stops living in your head

2) One behaviour you’ll stick to

Something small you can repeat weekly:

  • A 30-minute money/admin reset
  • A weekly priority list
  • A proper review of costs once a month
  • A capacity check before saying yes

3) One thing you’re stopping

Because if nothing comes off the list, the new plan won’t stick.

👋 If you only take one thing away, let it be this…

This reset isn’t about doing more.

It’s about tightening the things that make business feel heavier than it needs to be — so Q2 is smoother, calmer, and more profitable.

👇 Want the full Q2 plan of attack?

If you want a simple, practical plan for the quarter ahead (without loads of noise), sign up to Sumthing To Say.

It’s our quarterly newsletter for business owners who want to scale sustainably and successfully — with resources, reminders and everything you need to help you stay on track in Q2.

👉 Sign up to Sumthing To Say here

And do you need your accounts taken care of for you? You can Book a Discovery Call here.

Al, Dave & the ChadStone Team




Making Tax Digital (MTD) Made Simple – Everything You Need To Know

If you’ve seen “Making Tax Digital” everywhere lately and your brain has filed it under “I’ll deal with this later”… you’re not alone.

MTD has a habit of sounding bigger and scarier than it actually is. So this blog is here to do one job:

Answer your questions clearly, so you stop feeling overwhelmed.

What is MTD, in normal-person language?

Making Tax Digital for Income Tax (MTD ITSA) is HMRC changing how sole traders and landlords report their income tax information.

Instead of everything being pulled together once a year, MTD moves you towards:

  • keeping digital records (in compatible software)
  • sending quarterly updates to HMRC
  • then doing your year-end submission + final declaration

So it’s less “one big annual panic”, more “small check-ins that keep you on track”.

👀 Who does it apply to (and when)?

MTD for Income Tax comes in phases:

  • From 6 April 2026 if your qualifying turnover (turnover, not profit. So it’s about what comes in before expenses.) from self-employment and/or property is over £50,000(GOV.UK)
  • From 6 April 2027 if it’s over £30,000 (confirmed rollout) (Making Tax Digital for Income Tax)
  • Government has also said it intends to extend to those over £20,000 later. (GOV.UK)

HMRC are actively writing to individuals based on the figures in their 2024/25 tax returns. So in theory, if you’ve been mandated into MTD, you should receive a letter confirming it. It is still worth checking yourself though.

🚫 Does this apply to limited companies?

MTD for Income Tax is about individuals who currently do Self Assessment because they’re sole traders and/or landlords. If you run a Ltd company only, this particular change isn’t aimed at you. (GOV.UK)

🧾 What are “quarterly updates” and what do you actually submit?

Quarterly updates are not a full tax return, four times a year.

They are regular updates sent from your software that summarise your income and expenses for that period, for each income source (for example, one business and one rental property). (GOV.UK)

✅ Corrections are easier than you think

If something is missing or wrong, you fix it in your records and it gets reflected going forward. You do not have to resend the original update just because you corrected something later. (GOV.UK)

At the end of the tax year you’ll submit a year-end submission (sometimes called an End of Period Statement) and a final declaration that confirms your total position for the year. (GOV.UK)

📅 What are the quarterly deadlines?

Quarterly updates are due 1 month + 2 days after the end of each quarter. (GOV.UK)

For the first year (2026/27), the standard deadlines are:

  • Quarter 1 (6 Apr–5 Jul) → 7 Aug 2026
  • Quarter 2 (6 Jul–5 Oct) → 7 Nov 2026
  • Quarter 3 (6 Oct–5 Jan) → 7 Feb 2027
  • Quarter 4 (6 Jan–5 Apr) → 7 May 2027

(Your software will also prompt you, but it helps to know the dates.)

The big worry: “Does this change when I pay tax?”

No — you will not pay 4 tax bills a year. 

✅ The main deadline is still 31 January

The deadline for paying your tax is still 31 January (just like now). 

And if you currently pay payments on account, those are still typically due 31 January and 31 July, as they are under Self Assessment today. (GOV.UK)

So MTD is about how you report during the year, not moving you onto “four tax bills”.

🧾 When is the year-end deadline?

Your final submission/final declaration deadline remains 31 January after the tax year ends

Example: for the 2026/27 tax year (6 April 2026 to 5 April 2027), the year-end deadline is 31 January 2028. (GOV.UK)

💷 Penalties: “Will I be fined if I get this wrong?”

HMRC has confirmed a 12-month soft landing from April 2026, meaning penalty points for late quarterly submissions are suspended in that first year (so people have time to adjust). (MoneyWeek)

After that, it works on a points-based system rather than “one late update = instant fine”. (MoneyWeek)

💻 Do I need software? (And what should I use?)

Yes — MTD requires compatible software to keep digital records and send quarterly updates. (GOV.UK)

We recommend Xero for most clients because it’s user-friendly and does the job properly.

Through ChadStone, we can get you set up on Xero from £7 + VAT/month, and we provide free Xero training for clients so you’re not left guessing.

🛠️ What should you do now (so this doesn’t become “April panic”)?

Here’s the calm plan:

1) Work out if you’re likely in scope

If you’re a sole trader/landlord and you’re anywhere near £50k turnover, it’s worth checking now. HMRC also provides a tool to check eligibility/timing. (GOV.UK)

2) Get set up early

This is easier when you’re not trying to learn software at the same time as running your business.

3) Build a simple habit

Little-and-often record keeping beats “one big admin day” every time.

4) Ask before you’re stressed

If you’re unsure whether it applies to you, or how to set it up properly, we can help you get clarity quickly.

🙋 Quick-fire FAQs

“Do I have to do a full tax return every quarter?”
No. Quarterly updates are updates. The year-end submission/final declaration is where the full position is confirmed.

“Will I still pay by 31 January?”
Yes. Your main tax payment deadline is still 31 January.

“What if I have both business and rental income?”
You’ll submit updates for each income source through your software.

👇 What we’re doing throughout March to help

This blog is the “big picture”.

Throughout March, we’ll be sharing bite-sized, simple resources on our company social media pages.

And if you’d rather skip the uncertainty and just get it sorted: contact us now and we’ll help you work out what applies to you and the best next step.

Al, Dave & the ChadStone Team


IN THE MEANTIME, HERE’S SOMETHING FOR YOU…👇

  • Get the latest finance tips, business hacks, free resources, hilarity, memes and more by joining our quarterly newsletter, ‘Sumthing To Say’ here.
  • Do you need your accounts taken care of for you? You can Book a Discovery Call here.




The Post-January Slump: How to Keep Momentum Without Burning Yourself Out

January is full of good intentions.

New notebooks. New plans. New “this is the year” energy. And for about two weeks, it genuinely works.

Then February turns up.

The inbox is still doing its thing. Your diary fills up again. Your team is back, but everyone’s a bit… meh

And suddenly you’re trying to run a business and be a person and keep the wheels on without the adrenaline of a “fresh start” to carry you.

If you’re feeling the post-January slump, here’s the reassuring part:

You’re not behind. You’re just in the bit of the year where momentum has to come from small, sensible structure rather than motivation.

So, let’s talk about how to keep moving, without burning out👇

Why February feels harder than January (and why that’s normal) 🗓️

January can be chaos, but it’s chaos with a purpose. 

You’re resetting, planning, catching up, getting back into routines.

February is when the “real year” begins.

And burnout doesn’t usually happen because you’re doing one massive thing. It tends to happen because of these three things:

  1. You try to do the whole year at once.
    You feel pressure to “get on top of everything” and end up carrying too much in your head.
  2. Everything starts to feel urgent.
    When priorities aren’t clear, you default to reacting. Which is exhausting.
  3. There’s no recovery built into the week.
    If your week only works when nothing goes wrong… it’s going to feel heavy fast.

The fix isn’t “work harder”.

It’s tightening a few things so the business stops living rent-free in your brain 🧠

The Calm Week Checklist (aka: how to run a better February)📋

1. Pick one meaningful thing to move forward each week

Not ten. Not a list that needs its own spreadsheet. Just one.

One thing that would make you feel like the week wasn’t just emails, meetings and mild stress.

Examples ✅

Maybe it’s sorting a process that keeps causing problems.
Maybe it’s getting on top of a cashflow wobble.
Maybe it’s properly reviewing pricing.
Maybe it’s finally dealing with that one client situation you keep avoiding.

You’ll still do everything else. But giving the week a “main point” makes a huge difference.

2. Protect one block of thinking time (because reacting isn’t a strategy) 🙆

Most directors spend all week in the business, and almost no time on it.

So try this: book one hour a week where you’re not available for anything else.

No calls. No emails. No “quick question”.

Just space to step back and ask:

What’s working? What’s drifting? What’s about to become a problem if I ignore it?

Treat it like a client meeting.

Because if you wouldn’t cancel on a client… don’t cancel on your own business.

3. Write a “stop doing” list (yes, really) ❌

This is the underrated one.

Most people make a to-do list, then keep adding more to it until they’re basically running a business and a crisis at the same time.

A stop-doing list might be:

  • Pausing a project that’s draining time for low return
  • Saying no to last-minute favours that derail the day
  • Stopping “helpful extras” that keep expanding
  • Delaying anything that isn’t urgent or important (even if it’s exciting)

You don’t need more on your plate in February.
You need fewer things pretending to be essential.

4. Make meetings end with decisions, not just conversation 🤝

If your weekly meeting ends with “good chat”… but nothing changes… you’ll be having the same meeting next week.

Try this simple rule:

Every meeting ends with:

  • What we decided
  • What happens next
  • Who owns it (one person, not “we’ll all keep an eye on it”)

If it’s unassigned, it floats.
If it floats, it becomes urgent later.
And urgent later is always more stressful than “sorted now”.

5. Do a 30-minute admin reset (so February doesn’t snowball)🌨️

This isn’t “spend a day doing finances”.

This is a 30-minute reset that clears the background noise.

Once a week, set a timer and do a quick check on:

  • Anything overdue (invoices, actions, chasing)
  • Costs that are creeping up quietly
  • What cash looks like for the next few weeks
  • The “unknowns” you need answers on

The goal isn’t perfection. The goal is removing that constant feeling of “I should probably look at that…”

If you only take one thing away, let it be this…🙌

February doesn’t need a massive new plan.

It needs a structure that still works when you’re tired, busy, and real life happens.

One weekly priority. One thinking block. One thing you stop doing.
Small moves. Massive relief.

And if you want help putting some calm structure around your business, that’s exactly what we do.

Al, Dave & the ChadStone Team


IN THE MEANTIME, HERE’S SOMETHING FOR YOU…👇

  • Get the latest finance tips, business hacks, free resources, hilarity, memes and more by joining our quarterly newsletter, ‘Sumthing To Say’ here.
  • Do you need your accounts taken care of for you? You can Book a Discovery Call here.




9 things your accountant wishes you’d do in January

January can be a lot, especially if you run a business.

You’re expected to reflect on last year, plan the next one, be “strategic”, clear your inbox, file your tax return and somehow emerge from it all refreshed, enlightened and on top of everything 🫩

From our side of the fence at ChadStone, we see business owners go through the same thing every year:

  • The same last-minute panics.
  • The same “we wish we’d done this sooner” conversations.
  • And the same small things that would make the rest of the year feel a lot calmer if they were done now, rather than in a rush later.

So instead of giving you another vague “New Year checklist”, we asked the team a more honest question👇

“What’s the ONE thing you wish every client would do in January?”

Here are their answers – 9 simple, real-life things your accountant quietly wishes you’d get sorted before the year runs away with you.

1. Ask our admin team before you sacrifice a day to paperwork ☕️

Tip from Sarah & Charl (our admin dream team):

While the accountants are deep in numbers, Sarah and Charl are the ones quietly saving people from GOV.UK rabbit holes and HMRC hold music.

Their top tip is very straightforward: message them first.

They can👇

  • Send copies of accounts, tax returns, SA302s and tax year overviews
  • Dig out company numbers and details you’ve “definitely saved somewhere”
  • Handle PAYE, Self Assessment and VAT registrations
  • Update addresses and company details
  • Sort Confirmation Statements and filing dates
  • Rescue you from portal login dramas
  • Sit on hold to HMRC so you don’t have to
  • Help with tax investigation insurance admin
  • Clarify payment amounts, deadlines and reference numbers

If something is administrative, confusing or likely to steal half a day you don’t have, start with them. They are truly magical and we don’t know where we would be without them!

2. Skim money into a savings pot before you get attached to it 💷

Tip from Matt:

Matt’s advice is the one that stops December turning into “where on earth are we going to find that tax money?” season.

Set up a separate business savings account and skim a proportion of your income into it regularly.

It doesn’t need to be clever or complicated. Just:

  • Open a savings pot in your business banking
  • Move a % of monthly income into it automatically
  • Treat it as untouchable money for tax and “things going wrong”

The exact percentage will be different for everyone – a sole trader, a limited company and a VAT-registered business will all need different levels. The important bit is building the habit now and then agreeing the right % with your accountant, rather than trying to magic the money up at the end of the year.

3. Stop letting your bank balance run the show 📊

Tip from Dave:

Dave’s one comes up a lot in conversations with directors:

Your bank balance is not a full health check for the business.

A healthy balance today might be hiding:

  • VAT and Corporation Tax due soon
  • Big bills around the corner
  • Seasonal swings you’ve forgotten about

A low balance might simply be timing – a quiet week before a busy month.

Tax is based on profit and drawings, not just “what’s left in the account”. If you’re basing decisions purely on what the banking app says on a Tuesday morning, you’re flying partially blind.

This is where management information and an honest chat with us makes a big difference. We can help you understand what’s really going on underneath the numbers on the screen.

4. Tell us what’s really going on behind the scenes 🤝

Tip from Al:

Al’s is a good one to always remember:

Be open with your advisers. The more we know, the more we can help.

That might be:

  • Telling us about big plans before you commit to them
  • Admitting which parts of last year felt hard, even if the top line looked fine
  • Sharing what’s actually keeping you awake, not just what sounds neat in a meeting

We’re not here to judge. We’re here to help you make better decisions with the whole picture in mind – the numbers, the people and the way you want the business to feel.

If you only ever show us the polished version, we’re trying to help with one hand tied behind our back.

5. Stop mixing business and personal money 💳

Tip from Hannah:

Hannah’s tip makes everything easier, for you and for us:

Keep your business and personal spending separate. Properly.

In real terms that means:

  • A business account for business income and costs
  • A personal account for your life
  • Ideally, a separate savings pot inside the business for tax and future commitments

It sounds basic, but it:

  • Makes bookkeeping and year-end much simpler
  • Gives you a clearer picture of what the business actually costs to run
  • Stops your tax money escaping via the supermarket shop and Saturday nights

If your first step when we ask for business transactions is scrolling miles of mixed personal and business spend… This is the change that will save everyone a lot of time.

6. Ask the “silly” questions before they become expensive❓

Tip from Almo:

Almo’s point is aimed at people earlier in their journey, but the principle applies to everyone:

Don’t be afraid to ask questions – especially the ones you think you ‘should’ already know the answer to.

We’d much rather you ask:

  • “Can I claim this?”
  • “Is this the best way to set things up?”
  • “Is there a better option I haven’t thought about?”

…than keep quiet and find out years later you’ve overpaid tax or missed something obvious.

There’s no prize for pretending you understand everything. If something doesn’t make sense, January is a good moment to speak up.

7. Notice when the rules quietly change 📅

Tip from Whitby:

Whitby’s reminder is about the stuff that shifts in the background:

Keep an eye on tax changes that might affect you – especially around dividends and rental profits.

This matters if you:

  • Take a lot of income through dividends
  • Have rental properties or other investments
  • Have more than one source of income

You don’t need to spend your life refreshing GOV.UK, but you do need to know when it’s your turn to pay attention – and when to ask, “Is anything changing that I should know about?”

Finding out at the point of a higher-than-expected tax bill is the worst version of that conversation.

8. Check whether MTD for Self Assessment is going to hit you 💻

Tip from Mol:

Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax / Self Assessment is slowly edging closer for a lot of people.

Mol’s advice:

Find out early whether MTD is going to apply to you – and get set up in good time if it does.

If you’re in scope, you’ll move from one annual return to quarterly digital submissions.

That sounds scarier than it needs to be. Set up with decent records and the right software, it’s manageable. Try to sort everything last-minute and it becomes unnecessarily painful.

If you’re not sure whether this is going to affect you, that’s your cue to ask now rather than in a panic later.

9. Give yourself a basic cashflow view for the year 🔮

Tip from Owen:

O’s tip is the one that quietly lowers the background stress:

Put a simple cashflow forecast in place for the year ahead.

This doesn’t need to be complicated. A clear view of:

  • What’s likely to come in
  • What you already know is going out
  • How that roughly looks over the next 12 months

is enough to make a big difference.

It turns “I hope this will be okay” into “I can see where the tight spots are and plan for them”. You’ll sleep better, make calmer decisions and have fewer nasty surprises.

If you only do one of these…

You don’t have to spring into action on all nine.

If you’re already juggling a lot, here’s the realistic version:

  • Read the list once.
  • Notice which point made you think, “Yes, that’s the one I keep putting off.”
  • Drop us a message about just that one.

We’ll help you sort it.

No lectures. No guilt. Just a less stressful version of the next 12 months – which, if you ask most accountants, is exactly what we’d love you to have.

Al, Dave & the ChadStone Team


IN THE MEANTIME, HERE’S SOMETHING FOR YOU…👇

  • Get the latest finance tips, business hacks, free resources, hilarity, memes and more by joining our quarterly newsletter, ‘Sumthing To Say’ here.
  • Do you need your accounts taken care of for you? You can Book a Discovery Call here.




The Year-End Reset: 9 Small Moves That’ll Help You Start 2026 in a Much Better Place

December has two speeds: flat-out chaos, or total standstill. Sometimes both in the same day.

But while everyone else is rushing to finish what they started, there’s a quieter power in choosing what to complete, pause, or let go of — so you don’t carry it into next year.

Here are 10 small (but smart) things you can still do this month to give yourself the best possible head start for 2026 — financially, operationally, and mentally.

💷 1. Gently Chase What You’re Owed

Still waiting on a few late invoices? You’re not alone.

Use this line — it works:
“Let me know if there’s anything holding this up.”

✅ It’s calm. Clear. And it opens the door if someone’s struggling.

✅ Now’s also the time to review your payment terms for 2026:
– Do they include admin fees or interest for late payments?
– Are they being enforced?

🎄 2. Claim What You’re Entitled To (Festive Edition)

Christmas parties are tax-free for employees and deductible for the business, up to £150 per head (inc. VAT).
Must be open to all employees — and if you go over, the entire cost becomes taxable.

🔗 GOV.UK: Staff parties

https://www.gov.uk/expenses-and-benefits-social-functions-parties

Staff gifts can fall under the trivial benefits exemption if:

– They’re under £50
– Not cash or a cash voucher
– Not in return for work
– Not part of a salary arrangement

🔗 GOV.UK: Trivial benefits

https://www.gov.uk/expenses-and-benefits-trivial-benefits

Client gifts: Must be under £50, branded with your company name, and not food, drink, or tobacco

 🔗 Client gift rules – GOV.UK

https://www.gov.uk/expenses-and-benefits/gifts-to-clients

Claim what you’re entitled to — but keep it compliant.

If in doubt, just ask — we’ll help you avoid any festive fallout.

🧠 3. Conduct a ‘Brain Dump’ Review

Block out 45 minutes, grab a coffee, and answer:

– What worked this year?
– What drained you?
– What clients, projects or habits would you do differently?

It’s not about setting resolutions. It’s about starting next year with clarity instead of carry-on chaos.

📂 4. Tidy Your Financial Systems

✅ Reconcile any final transactions
✅ Upload receipts, update mileage logs
✅ File what needs filing
✅ Make notes your accountant (and future-you) will thank you for

It doesn’t have to be perfect — just better than last year.

💡 5. Adjust Your Payment on Account (if needed)

If your income is lower this year, you may be eligible to reduce your payment on account (due 31 Jan).

✅ Don’t wait until the deadline. Check now.
✅ This can significantly help Q1 cashflow.

🔗 GOV.UK: Payments on account

https://www.gov.uk/understand-self-assessment-bill/payments-on-account

📝 6. Draft Your 2026 “What We’re Not Doing” List

It’s easy to start planning new goals for January. But first — make a list of what you don’t want to carry forward.

– Unprofitable services
– Nightmare clients
– Overcommitment
– Systems that don’t scale

Before you add more, create space.

📧 7. Write Your January Catch-Ups (Now)

✅ Pre-write “back from the break” emails to clients
✅ Schedule a few January check-ins with key relationships
✅ Plan something proactive — so you’re not in reactive mode from day one

💬 8. Say Thank You

Whether it’s clients, suppliers, or that one person who always sends you referrals — send a message or a small gesture to say thanks.

It costs nothing to be decent. And it often builds more goodwill than the fanciest gifts.

🛑 9. Close the Tabs (Literally and Mentally)

Before you log off, ask:

– What can I archive or delete?
– What genuinely needs revisiting in January — and what doesn’t?
– What do I need to let go of to give myself a clean slate?

This might be the most valuable action of all.

💬 Final word:

Q1 doesn’t start strong because of what you do in January.
It starts strong because of what you don’t leave unfinished in December.

We’re here if you need support tying up the loose ends — financial or otherwise.

Until then, take the time. Close the tabs. And enjoy the break when it comes.

Need help with any of the above?

We’re not just about year-end accounts.

We’re here to help business owners succeed.

If you’d like support with your cashflow, forecasting, tax planning or even just having a better relationship with your numbers before the year wraps up… get in touch.

Al, Dave & the ChadStone Team


IN THE MEANTIME, HERE’S SOMETHING FOR YOU…👇

  • Get the latest finance tips, business hacks, free resources, hilarity, memes and more by joining our quarterly newsletter, ‘Sumthing To Say’ here.
  • Do you need your accounts taken care of for you? You can Book a Discovery Call here.




How to Finish the Year Strong (Without Burning Out Before December)

Q4 can be the most rewarding time of the year — or the most exhausting. Sometimes both.

You’re juggling deadlines, invoices, client work, staff holidays, planning for next year… and then someone says “Are we doing a Christmas party?” and it all goes a bit blurry.

This blog isn’t here to pile more onto your plate — it’s to help you end the year in control, with practical steps that support both your business and your brain.

Let’s get into it 👇

🧾 1. Review Your Financial Position — But Make It Useful

This isn’t about scrolling through bank transactions.

It’s about asking:

– What worked this year?
– What drove profit (and what didn’t)?
– Are you chasing revenue targets that no longer make sense?

✅ Action to take:

– Book in a 1:1 with your accountant and check your Xero dashboard (or the software you use)
– Run a simple P&L comparison: year to date vs this time last year
– Use it to plan what’s worth pushing in Q4 — and what’s not worth your energy

📉 2. Declutter Your Overheads

Q4 is the perfect time to get ruthless with outgoings.

✅ Action to take:

– Review all subscriptions, software and recurring payments
– Cancel or downgrade anything that isn’t delivering value
– If you’ve got stock, office supplies or assets not pulling their weight — address it now

It’s easier to make these calls now than when your January cashflow is already stretched.

📆 3. Treat December Like It’s Already Mid-January

It sounds pessimistic. It’s not. It’s practical.

✅ Action to take:

– Forecast your cashflow through to Feb 2026 and consider:

  – Staff bonuses
  – Christmas shut-down periods
  – VAT or tax deadlines in Jan
  – Overdue invoices

If you need help modelling your cashflow or adjusting your payment on account, we can help.

💬 4. Automate Your Invoice Chasing

Late payments spike in Q4 — not because people are ignoring you, but because they’re buried too.

✅ Action to take:

– Set up automated invoice reminders
– Send a friendly 1–day-late message like:
  “Let me know if there’s anything holding this up.”
– Make sure your payment terms include late payment interest and admin fees

🧘‍♀️ 5. Block Out Your ‘Non-Negotiables’

Don’t leave your personal time as the gap-filler.

✅ Action to take:

– Block breaks, quiet days and planning time in your calendar now
– Set boundaries with clients and your team for your last working day
– Decide what projects aren’t getting done this year — and be okay with that

Running a business is hard. You’re allowed to make space for yourself.

🧾 6. Check for Last-Minute Tax Planning Opportunities

You’ve still got time to optimise how your year ends financially — without big drama.

✅ Action to take:

– Review your salary/dividend split
– Decide whether to issue bonuses now or in Jan
– See if you’re eligible to reduce your payment on account in January if income is down

✍️ 7. Redefine What a ‘Successful December’ Looks Like

You don’t have to end the year with a bang.

You just have to end it with clarity.

✅ Action to take:

– Write down three goals for the rest of the year — and three things you’re actively not doing
– Avoid defaulting into “more” when “done” is the smarter move
– Choose rest over reactivity

You can’t enter 2026 strong if you’re crawling to the finish line.

👋 Bonus: Prep Your Out of Office Like a Pro

A proper OOO sets the tone for boundaries and makes your return in January 10x easier.

Action to take:

– Decide your last working day now
– Let clients know in advance
– Schedule a January check-in with key clients before you log off

Update your OOO message with:

  – When you’ll be back
  – Who to contact in the meantime
  – A clear, confident tone

Need help with any of the above?

We’re not just about year-end accounts.

We’re here to help business owners succeed.

If you’d like support with your cashflow, forecasting, tax planning or even just having a better relationship with your numbers before the year wraps up… get in touch.

Al, Dave & the ChadStone Team


IN THE MEANTIME, HERE’S SOMETHING FOR YOU…👇

  • Get the latest finance tips, business hacks, free resources, hilarity, memes and more by joining our monthly newsletter, ‘Sumthing To Say’ here.
  • Do you need your accounts taken care of for you? You can Book a Discovery Call here.




9 Things You Can Do Now to Make Q4 Less Chaotic

The final quarter of the year tends to go one of two ways:

You’re either ahead of the curve… or chasing it all the way to Christmas Eve.

Here are 9 practical things business owners can do now to make Q4 smoother, more profitable, and (hopefully) a little less stressful.

1. Get your Self-Assessment submitted (yes, already)

We know the deadline is 31 January 2026 — but waiting until January is a guaranteed stress-fest.

✅ File it now and you’ll:

– Know exactly what you owe
– Avoid the New Year bottleneck
– Get time to budget properly

If your income is lower than last year, you may be able to reduce your payment on account — we can help with that.

🔗 Self Assessment deadline and payment info

2. Review your cashflow through to February 2026

Christmas can quietly squeeze your cashflow.

✅ Look ahead at:

– Staff bonuses and parties
– Supplier shutdowns
– Overdue invoices that need chasing
– January tax payments

Planning it now stops the January surprise.

3. Chase invoices (and automate the follow-ups)

One unpaid invoice in November can derail December.

✅ Our recommended approach:

– Set up automatic reminders in software like Xero or QuickBooks
– Include clear payment terms and late payment clauses in your Terms of Service
– Try a human-friendly nudge like:
  “Let me know if there’s anything holding this up.”

– If you know someone is struggling, or they’ve gone quiet, call and check-in and open up the conversation.

It’s helped clients recover thousands in late invoices.

4. Use your tax allowances before they reset

Most personal tax allowances reset on 6 April 2026, which means Q4 is a good time to check you’re making full use of them.

✅ Here are the key ones:

ISA Allowance: £20,000 per person
 🔗 ISA allowances

Dividend Allowance: £500
  (Dropped from £1,000 last year)
  🔗 Dividend tax rates

Capital Gains Tax Allowance: £3,000
  (Dropped from £6,000 in 2023/24)
  🔗 CGT Allowance

Pension Annual Allowance: Up to £60,000 depending on income
  🔗 Pension contribution limits

Use them or lose them — most can’t be carried forward.

5. Review director salaries and bonuses

There is still time to adjust your setup for maximum efficiency.

✅ Now’s the time to:

– Review your salary/dividend split
– Consider end-of-year bonuses
– Maximise pension contributions while they still count

It’s all about timing — and staying tax-efficient.

6. Don’t forget what’s tax-deductible this season

Christmas isn’t just a celebration — it’s an opportunity (tax-wise, anyway).

Staff parties (Annual Event Exemption)

– You can claim up to £150 per person, including VAT
– It must be an annual event (like a Christmas party)
– It must be open to all staff
– You can run multiple events per year — as long as the combined total doesn’t exceed £150 per person. Go over the limit, and the whole amount becomes taxable.

🔗 Annual party exemption

Staff gifts (Trivial Benefits Exemption)

You can give employees a small gift tax-free if it meets all of the following conditions:

– It costs £50 or less (including VAT)
– It’s not cash or a cash voucher
– It’s not a reward for work or performance
– It’s not part of a salary sacrifice arrangement
– It’s not contractual

🔗 Trivial benefits

Client gifts: Must be under £50, branded with your company name, and not food, drink, or tobacco

 🔗 Client gift rules

Claim what you’re entitled to — but keep it compliant.

7. Check your insurance cover (especially for tax investigations)

Two types of cover worth double-checking before year-end:

Tax Investigation Insurance

– Covers professional fees if HMRC open an enquiry (which can happen randomly)
– Saves you time, stress, and money

– Unsure what this means, or you’re ready to get it set up, give us a call.

Business insurance

– Has anything changed? New equipment, premises, people?
– Make sure your policy still fits the business you’re actually running

Peace of mind is worth it.

8. Get your identity verified with Companies House

From 18 November 2025, identity verification becomes mandatory for:

– Company directors
– People with Significant Control (PSCs)
– Members of LLPs

You can verify via GOV.UK using a One Login account, or we can handle it for you as an authorised agent.

Our fee is £50 + VAT per person — no faff, just done.

🔗 Identity verification changes – Companies House

9. Block time off — seriously

Rest isn’t a luxury. It’s how you start 2026 clear-headed.

✅ Make sure:

– Your out-of-office is ready
– Clients know your cut-off date
– You don’t schedule any big projects in that weird week between Christmas and New Year

Running a business is full-on. You’ve earned the break.

Need help ticking any of this off?

We’re not just here for your year-end accounts.

We help business owners make smarter financial moves all year round — and right now is a great time to make a few.

If anything on this list sounds like something you’ve been putting off, give us a shout.

Al, Dave & the ChadStone Team



IN THE MEANTIME, HERE’S SOMETHING FOR YOU…👇

  • Get the latest finance tips, business hacks, free resources, hilarity, memes and more by joining our monthly newsletter, ‘Sumthing To Say’ here.
  • Do you need your accounts taken care of for you? You can Book a Discovery Call here.




September Reset: 6 Ways to Get Your Business (and Finances) Back on Track

Can we just take a second to acknowledge that… we’re somehow in September already? 😳

If 2025 has flown by faster than your summer holidays, you’re not alone.

But instead of panicking about year-end deadlines, this is your friendly nudge to pause, reset, and make the last four months of the year count.

Here are 6 things you can do right now to get your business (and your numbers) back on track — without the overwhelm 👇

1. Check your Corporation Tax deadline

If your company year-end was 31st December, Corporation Tax is due on 1st October.

It’s one of those sneaky deadlines that shows up just when you’ve got a million other things on your plate. Leaving it to the last minute = stress you don’t need.

💡 ChadStone Tip:

  • Check when your Corporation Tax bill is due (dates vary depending on year-end).
  • Put aside around 20% of your profits each month so the money’s ready when the bill lands. No scrambling, no “where do we find it?”, no drama.

Your future self (and your accountant) will thank you for making it a habit.

📊 2. Review your management accounts

Think of management accounts as your business dashboard. Without them, you’re basically driving blind.

They’ll show you:

– What’s actually working (and what isn’t)

– Where the money is going

– Whether you can afford that hire / investment / upgrade you’ve been putting off

💡 ChadStone Tip:

If you don’t have regular management accounts yet, now’s the perfect time to start. You’ll thank yourself in December.

👥 3. Get payroll & compliance sorted

Payroll isn’t glamorous — but when it goes wrong, everyone notices.

Ask yourself:

– Are our systems fully compliant with the latest rules?

– Are we paying people accurately and on time?

– Can this process scale as our team grows?

💡 ChadStone Tip:

If the answer to any of these makes you wince, now’s the time to fix it.

💸 4. Stop the quiet leaks

Some drains on your business aren’t loud — they just quietly cost you thousands. Think:

– Subscriptions you’ve forgotten about

– Clients that drain your time but don’t pay their way

– Prices that haven’t been reviewed in years

💡 ChadStone Tip:

Take half an hour to list out your tools, costs, and clients. Cut the stuff that isn’t serving you.

🧠 5. Revisit your goals (and your energy)

Those January goals? Do they still fit? Or are they stressing you out more than motivating you?

September is a great time to:

– Reset your goals for Q4

– Be honest about what’s dragging you down

– Check in on your own energy (are you resting as well as working?)

💡 ChadStone Tip:

Business ownership doesn’t come with medals for burnout.

🤝 6. Reconnect with your network

Most opportunities don’t come from algorithms. They come from conversations.

So whether it’s your accountant (👋), a business buddy, or someone you promised to follow up with six months ago… now’s the time to reach out.

💡 ChadStone Tip:

A simple “How’s your year going?” can open more doors than you’d think.

Final Thought

If you take one thing away, let it be this:

– It’s not too late to reset.

– September is a natural “fresh start”.

– Small steps now can save you big headaches in December.

And if you’d like some extra support with management accounts, tax planning, or just making sure your payroll doesn’t give you nightmares — we’re right here, biscuits and all.

Al, Dave & the ChadStone Team



IN THE MEANTIME, HERE’S SOMETHING FOR YOU…👇

  • Get the latest finance tips, business hacks, free resources, hilarity, memes and more by joining our monthly newsletter, ‘Sumthing To Say’ here.
  • Do you need your accounts taken care of for you? You can Book a Discovery Call here.




7 Things Quietly Draining Your Business Right Now (And How to Fix Them)

Because not every business problem kicks the door down. Some just quietly cost you thousands.

We speak to a lot of business owners — and more often than not, the stuff causing the most stress isn’t loud or dramatic. It’s the quiet leaks.

The small-but-steady drains on your time, energy, and margins.

The good news? Once you spot them, they’re usually pretty easy to fix. 

So, here are 7 things that might be draining your business more than you realise — and how to sort them 👇

1. Keeping hold of bad-fit clients 👎

You know the ones. They drain your time, ignore your processes, and regularly make you question your life choices.

They might not seem like a problem when the invoices are going out… but when you factor in the stress, rework, and time lost? They’re expensive.

Fix it:

  • Know your red flags
  • Set clearer boundaries from enquiry level going forwards
  • Trust your gut
  • And if needed? Let them go. You’ll thank yourself later.

2. Not raising your prices 📈

If your costs have gone up but your prices haven’t changed in 2–3 years, your margins are almost definitely being squeezed.

You shouldn’t need to run twice as fast just to stand still.

Fix it:

  • Review your pricing every 12 months
  • Compare it against your rising costs
  • Communicate your value clearly (and confidently)

3. Subscription creep 💸

That software you trialled and forgot to cancel? That duplicate platform doing what your other platform already does?

It adds up — and fast.

Fix it:

  • Set a reminder to review your tools quarterly
  • Check for overlaps
  • Cancel anything you haven’t used in the past 3 months

4. Leaving your bookkeeping to the last minute 🧾

We get it. You’re busy. But the longer it’s left, the bigger the tangle — and the more it costs to fix.

It’s like ignoring laundry until it’s a floor-based mountain.

Fix it:

  • Set aside one day a month to check in with your numbers
  • Use MTD-approved (Making Tax Digital) software to automate what you can
  • Ask your accountant what can be streamlined

5. Doing everything yourself 🧠

The early days of business demand a bit of DIY. But wearing every hat forever is a recipe for burnout and bottlenecks.

Delegating doesn’t mean letting go of control — it means creating more space to focus on what you’re great at.

Fix it:

  • Start small (even 2 hours of VA support a week can help)
  • Identify your most draining tasks
  • Outsource or delegate what doesn’t need to be yours

6. Avoiding your numbers 🙈

We’re not here to tell you to obsess over every penny — but if you’re only looking at your finances once a year, you’re making decisions in the dark.

Confidence in your numbers = confidence in your decisions.

Fix it:

  • Review your P&L and cashflow monthly
  • Ask questions if things don’t make sense
  • Work with an accountant who’ll talk to you like a human

7. Never taking a break 💤

We’re not saying take six months off and move to Bali (although… tempting).

But running a business at full tilt, 12 months a year, with no recovery time? It takes a toll. On you and the business.

Fix it:

  • Plan your downtime like you plan your meetings
  • Switch off properly when you can
  • Remind yourself that rest is productive too

The tiny leaks matter.

If you’re tired of feeling like you’re sprinting just to keep up, it might not be a big fix you need — just a few small ones.

And if you’d like a fresh pair of eyes to help you spot the gaps?

We’re right here, biscuits and all.

📩 Get in touch to book a chat



Al, Dave and the ChadStone team


IN THE MEANTIME, HERE’S SOMETHING FOR YOU…👇

  • Get the latest finance tips, business hacks, free resources, hilarity, memes and more by joining our monthly newsletter, ‘Sumthing To Say’ here.
  • Do you need your accounts taken care of for you? You can Book a Discovery Call here.




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