Running a business on your own is hard enough. Between finding clients, delivering work, and managing your time, bookkeeping often ends up at the bottom of the list. But the mistakes that happen when books are neglected are not just administrative headaches — they cost real money.
After 15 years in accounting and tax consultancy, I have reviewed hundreds of sets of books. The same five mistakes come up again and again — across industries, across income levels, across every type of sole trader you can imagine. The good news is that every single one of them is fixable.
UK sole traders and landlords now required to report digitally to HMRC under Making Tax Digital for Income Tax — and many are still not prepared for what that means day-to-day.
Mixing personal and business finances
This is the most common mistake and the one that causes the most confusion at year end. When your business income and personal spending flow through the same bank account, it becomes almost impossible to know your true profit — and you risk claiming personal expenses as business ones, which HMRC takes very seriously.
Beyond the tax risk, mixing finances makes it extremely difficult to understand your cash position. You might think you have £3,000 available when £1,200 of that is already committed to personal bills.
Not keeping receipts — or keeping them badly
HMRC requires you to keep records of all business income and expenses for at least five years after the 31 January self-assessment deadline. A box of paper receipts that you sort in December is not a system — it is a liability.
Missing receipts mean missed expense claims. If you cannot prove a purchase was for business purposes, you cannot deduct it. That directly increases your taxable profit and your tax bill.
Falling behind on reconciliation
Bank reconciliation — matching your accounting records to your actual bank statement — is the single most important task in bookkeeping. When it is done monthly, errors are caught quickly and corrected easily. When it is done once a year in January, small mistakes have compounded into large ones.
Unreconciled books mean you do not know your real cash position, you cannot trust your profit figures, and your tax return takes far longer to prepare — which means higher accountant fees if you use one.
Not tracking VAT correctly — or not registering when required
The UK VAT registration threshold is currently £90,000. Many sole traders watch their revenue grow without tracking their rolling 12-month turnover carefully — and then find themselves over the threshold, legally obligated to register, with no VAT recorded on past invoices. HMRC can and does issue backdated VAT bills.
On the other side, some sole traders who are VAT registered make errors in their returns — claiming input VAT on non-qualifying expenses, or miscalculating output VAT on mixed-rate sales. Under Making Tax Digital for VAT, these errors are harder to hide and quicker to be flagged.
Not being ready for Making Tax Digital
From 6 April 2026, MTD for Income Tax is mandatory for sole traders and landlords earning over £50,000. Instead of one annual Self Assessment return, you now need to submit quarterly digital updates to HMRC. The threshold drops to £30,000 in April 2027 and £20,000 in April 2028.
Sole traders still keeping records in spreadsheets, notebooks, or memory are not MTD-compliant. HMRC will not issue penalties for late quarterly updates in year one — but penalties apply in full from year two. The time to get set up is now, not in January.
Quick reference summary
| Mistake | Risk | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Mixing personal & business finances | Wrong expense claims, HMRC scrutiny | Separate business bank account |
| No receipt system | Missed deductions, higher tax bill | Xero / QuickBooks receipt capture |
| Skipping reconciliation | Unknown cash position, compounding errors | Monthly bank reconciliation |
| VAT errors or late registration | Backdated bills, HMRC penalties | Track rolling 12-month turnover |
| Not MTD-ready | Penalty points from year two | MTD-compatible software now |
The real cost of getting it wrong
Bookkeeping mistakes are not just inconvenient — they are expensive. Missed expense claims mean paying more tax than you legally owe. VAT errors mean penalties and backdated bills. Poor records mean higher accountant fees at year end. And falling behind on MTD compliance means HMRC penalty points that accumulate quickly.
More importantly, books that are not up to date mean you are running your business blind. You cannot make confident decisions about pricing, investment, or hiring when you do not know your actual profit. The solution is not complicated — the right software, a consistent habit of recording income and expenses, and a monthly review of your numbers. That is it.
Are any of these mistakes happening in your books?
I offer a free 30-minute bookkeeping health check for UK sole traders and small businesses. No obligation, no sales pitch — honest advice on what to fix and how.