Bookkeeping vs. Accounting Pricing: What’s the Difference?
Bookkeeping and accounting are related but distinct. Bookkeeping focuses on accurate transaction categorization and reconciliations; accounting focuses on higher-level adjustments, reporting, tax strategy, and compliance. Here’s how pricing differs and when you need each.
What Bookkeepers Do (and How They’re Priced)
Monthly categorization, bank/credit card reconciliation, software admin, and basic reporting. Flat-rate plans usually include your QuickBooks/Xero subscription and start around $150/month for low volume.
What Accountants/CPAs Do (and How They’re Priced)
Period-end adjustments, review, complex reporting, tax planning, and filings. Pricing is often project-based or hourly and varies by complexity and frequency.
Do You Need Both?
Most small businesses use a monthly bookkeeping plan plus periodic CPA review/tax filing. This keeps run-rate costs predictable while ensuring compliance.
Common Cost Scenarios
- Starter: Bookkeeping plan only; CPA annually at tax time
- Growth: Bookkeeping + quarterly CPA oversight
- Complex: Bookkeeping + monthly CPA/controller involvement
Ways to Optimize Cost Across Both
- Keep your chart of accounts lean
- Provide timely statements and receipts
- Standardize processes (recurring vendors, scheduled close)
- Use a provider that includes software in the monthly plan
Compare monthly bookkeeping plans and get a tailored quote.
FAQs
Can a bookkeeper replace a CPA?
No. Bookkeepers maintain accurate books; CPAs handle advanced accounting and taxes. Most businesses use both at different times.
Is it cheaper to outsource both bookkeeping and accounting?
Usually. You avoid hiring costs and only pay for the scope you need.