Sole Trader Bookkeeping Basics
Set up simple, compliant bookkeeping as a UK sole trader and stay ready for Self Assessment all year round.
Good bookkeeping is the foundation of a healthy sole trader business. It keeps you on the right side of HMRC, shows you whether you are actually making money, and turns the dreaded Self Assessment tax return into a quick, predictable job rather than a January panic. The good news is that bookkeeping for a sole trader is far simpler than for a limited company, and you can get a compliant system running in an afternoon. This guide walks you through the essentials.
For the wider picture, start with our self-employed and sole traders hub .
Why sole traders need good records
As a sole trader you and your business are legally the same person, so your business profit is taxed through your personal Self Assessment return. HMRC expects you to be able to back up every figure you declare. Beyond compliance, accurate records help you:
- See your true profit rather than just your bank balance
- Set aside enough to cover Income Tax and National Insurance
- Spot late-paying customers and rising costs early
- Claim every allowable expense you are entitled to
- Apply for finance or a mortgage with evidence of earnings
If HMRC opens an enquiry, well-organised records are your best protection. Poor records can lead to penalties even where no extra tax is due.
Records HMRC expects you to keep
HMRC does not prescribe a particular format, but you must keep enough detail to complete an accurate return. In practice this means retaining:
- Sales records: invoices you issue, till rolls and records of cash takings
- Purchase and expense records: receipts, supplier invoices and bank statements
- Bank and card statements for any account used for the business
- Records of business mileage and any personal use of business assets
- Records of money you have taken out of the business (drawings)
You should keep these records for at least five years after the 31 January submission deadline for the relevant tax year. Digital copies are acceptable, and photographing receipts as you go is one of the easiest habits to build. See our notes on record keeping for expenses for practical detail.
Cash basis versus accruals
There are two ways to work out your profit, and most small sole traders can choose between them.
| Feature | Cash basis | Accruals basis |
|---|---|---|
| When income is recorded | When money is received | When the invoice is raised |
| When costs are recorded | When you pay them | When you are billed |
| Best suited to | Smaller, simpler businesses | Larger or growing businesses |
| Complexity | Lower | Higher |
The cash basis is often the default for self-employed people because it is intuitive: you only count money that has actually moved. The accruals basis (also called traditional accounting) matches income and costs to the period they relate to, which gives a more accurate view of performance but takes more effort. Your choice also affects how you treat equipment purchases and certain reliefs, so weigh it up using our guide to cash basis versus accruals .
Separating business and personal money
You are not legally required to have a separate business bank account as a sole trader, but it is strongly recommended. A dedicated account:
- Makes your bookkeeping far quicker to reconcile
- Removes the guesswork of sorting business from personal spending
- Presents a more professional picture to customers and lenders
If you genuinely cannot open a second account straight away, at least use a single personal account exclusively for the business and clearly mark any drawings. Mixing transactions across several accounts is the most common reason sole trader books become a mess.
Tracking income and expenses
Aim to record transactions little and often rather than in one yearly marathon. A reliable routine looks like this:
- Raise an invoice for every sale and number them sequentially
- Capture each receipt at the point of purchase, before it gets lost
- Reconcile your bank account weekly or monthly against your records
- Categorise costs consistently so totals are easy to pull out at year end
- Review what customers still owe you and chase overdue amounts
Use sensible categories from the start, broadly aligned with the boxes on the Self Assessment return, such as cost of goods, travel, premises, and professional fees. A consistent chart of accounts reference makes the year-end far smoother and reduces the chance of missing a deduction.
Preparing for Self Assessment
Your bookkeeping feeds directly into your tax return. Once you have totals for income and allowable expenses, the figure that matters is your taxable profit. Throughout the year you should:
- Keep a separate pot for tax so the bill never comes as a shock
- Track your profit so you can estimate what you will owe
- Note the deadlines: register by 5 October after your first year of trading, file online by 31 January, and pay any tax due by the same date
If your profit is above the relevant threshold you may also make payments on account towards the next year’s bill. For a full walkthrough of registering and filing, follow our guide to Self Assessment step by step , and read about setting aside money for tax so the payment never strains your cash flow.
Software versus spreadsheets
A spreadsheet can work perfectly well when you are starting out, are below the VAT threshold and have a low volume of transactions. It is free and flexible, but it relies entirely on manual entry and is easy to get wrong.
Dedicated bookkeeping software adds bank feeds, automatic categorisation, invoicing and reporting, which saves time and reduces errors as you grow. It also matters for the future: Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax will require many sole traders to keep digital records and submit quarterly updates using compatible software. Understanding the direction of travel now will save a scramble later, so read our explainer on MTD for Income Tax explained and our advice on choosing accounting software .
| Consideration | Spreadsheet | Software |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Free or very low | Monthly subscription |
| Bank feeds and automation | No | Yes |
| MTD readiness | Limited | Built in |
| Error risk | Higher | Lower |
For most sole traders, starting simple and moving to software as turnover grows is a sensible path.