What Records Should a Small Business Keep?
Introduction
Good accounting depends on good records.
A small business does not only need totals. It needs evidence.
A bank balance can show that money moved, but it does not explain what the money was for.
A profit and loss report can show income and expenses, but it depends on the records behind it.
A VAT return can show VAT payable or reclaimable, but it must be supported by invoices, receipts, VAT records and evidence.
A tax return can include income and expenses, but the business should be able to explain where those numbers came from.
The beginner lesson is simple:
Records are the evidence behind the numbers.
A small business should keep records that explain:
- what was sold,
- what was bought,
- who paid,
- who is owed,
- who needs to be paid,
- what evidence exists,
- what VAT or tax may be involved,
- what the bank movement means,
- what reports can be trusted.
For the wider starting guide, read Small Business Accounting Basics: Start Here.
Why business records matter
Business records help the owner, accountant and tax authority understand what happened.
They are useful for:
| Purpose | Why records matter |
|---|---|
| Cash flow | Shows what money came in and went out |
| Profit | Shows whether the business earned more than it spent |
| Tax | Supports income and expense figures |
| VAT | Supports VAT charged and VAT reclaimed |
| Invoices | Shows what customers were charged |
| Payments | Shows what customers paid |
| Bills | Shows what the business owes |
| Receipts | Shows evidence of purchases |
| Reports | Makes profit and balance sheet figures more reliable |
| Reconciliation | Connects bank movement to records |
| Accountant export | Gives cleaner evidence for review |
| Compliance | Helps prove figures if checked later |
Without records, the business depends on memory.
Memory is not enough.
Good records make the business easier to run and easier to explain.
The main record categories
A small business should usually think about records in categories.
| Record category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Income records | Sales invoices, till records, customer payments |
| Expense records | Receipts, supplier invoices, card payments |
| Bill records | Supplier bills, due dates, payment status |
| Bank records | Statements, bank feeds, transfers, payment references |
| Customer records | Customer details, invoices, payment history |
| Supplier records | Supplier invoices, statements, payment terms |
| VAT records | VAT invoices, VAT account, VAT returns, credit notes |
| Payroll records | Pay, deductions, employee records if employer |
| Company records | Directors, shareholders, accounts, filings if limited company |
| Contract records | Agreements, quotes, orders, project scope |
| Asset records | Equipment, vehicles, stock, machinery |
| Tax records | Returns, calculations, payment confirmations |
| Digital evidence | Uploaded documents, emails, confirmations, files |
Not every business needs every category on day one.
A sole trader with no VAT and no staff has simpler records than a VAT-registered limited company with payroll.
But every business needs enough records to explain its money.
Income records
Income records show what the business earned or charged.
They may include:
| Income record | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Sales invoices | Show what customers were charged |
| Copy invoices | Evidence of issued invoices |
| Customer receipts | Show money received |
| Till records | Support retail or cash sales |
| Payment processor reports | Support card or online sales |
| Marketplace reports | Support platform sales |
| Customer statements | Show account history |
| Contracts or orders | Support agreed work |
| Deposit records | Show advance payments |
| Credit notes | Correct sales invoices |
| Refund records | Correct customer payments |
Income records should answer:
- who the customer was,
- what was sold,
- when it was sold,
- how much was charged,
- whether VAT applied,
- whether payment was received,
- whether the invoice was corrected,
- whether any refund was issued.
Income records are not only for tax.
They also support cash flow, receivables and sales analysis.
For the difference between revenue and money received, read Revenue vs Cash Received.
Sales invoices
Sales invoices are among the most important business records.
An invoice should usually show:
| Invoice field | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Invoice number | Helps track and avoid duplicates |
| Invoice date | Shows when invoice was issued |
| Customer name | Shows who owes the money |
| Customer address or details | Supports customer record |
| Description | Explains goods or services supplied |
| Supply date | Shows when goods or services were provided |
| Net amount | Amount before VAT if relevant |
| VAT amount | Required if VAT applies |
| Gross amount | Total customer should pay |
| Due date | Shows when payment is expected |
| Payment details | Helps customer pay |
| Business details | Identifies the seller |
Invoices help the business see what has been charged.
But an invoice is not cash.
The customer still needs to pay.
For the full explanation, read Invoice vs Payment: Why They Should Not Be Mixed Up.
Customer payment records
Customer payment records show when money actually arrived.
Payment records may include:
| Payment record | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Bank receipt | Shows money entered the account |
| Card payment report | Shows customer card payment |
| Payment link confirmation | Shows payment method and time |
| Cash receipt | Shows cash collected |
| Cheque record | Shows cheque received or cleared |
| Payment processor settlement | Shows platform payout |
| Remittance advice | Shows what invoice customer paid |
| Part-payment record | Shows partial settlement |
| Overpayment record | Shows customer credit or refund need |
A payment should be matched to the correct invoice or customer.
If payments are not matched, the business may think customers still owe money when they have already paid.
Or the business may miss unpaid invoices.
For matching and bank checks, read Why Reconciliation Matters.
Aged receivables records
Aged receivables are records of unpaid customer invoices.
They help show:
| Receivable detail | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Customer name | Shows who owes money |
| Invoice number | Identifies the unpaid invoice |
| Invoice date | Shows when it was issued |
| Due date | Shows when payment was expected |
| Amount outstanding | Shows unpaid balance |
| Age of debt | Shows how late it is |
| Reminder history | Shows chasing action |
| Dispute notes | Explains payment delay |
| Promise-to-pay date | Supports follow-up |
| Credit notes | Shows corrections |
Aged receivables protect cash flow because they show where customer money is stuck.
A business should not wait until the bank is low before reviewing unpaid invoices.
For the full guide, read When to Look at Aged Receivables.
Expense records
Expense records show what the business spent money on.
They may include:
| Expense record | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Receipts | Evidence of purchase |
| Supplier invoices | Shows supplier charge |
| Card payment records | Shows cash movement |
| Bank payments | Shows amount paid |
| Expense claim forms | Supports staff or owner claims |
| Mileage records | Supports travel claims |
| Subscription invoices | Supports recurring costs |
| Supplier statements | Helps supplier account review |
| Refund records | Corrects costs |
| Credit notes | Corrects supplier bills |
| Category notes | Explains business purpose |
Expense records should answer:
- who was paid,
- what was bought,
- why it was business-related,
- when it happened,
- how much it cost,
- whether VAT was included,
- whether the business has evidence,
- whether the payment has been matched.
For the difference between bills and expenses, read Bill vs Expense: What Is the Real Difference?.
Receipts
Receipts are evidence.
A receipt should ideally show:
| Receipt detail | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Supplier name | Shows who was paid |
| Date | Shows when purchase happened |
| Items or description | Shows what was bought |
| Amount | Shows total cost |
| VAT amount if relevant | Supports VAT records |
| VAT number if relevant | Supports supplier VAT evidence |
| Payment method | Helps match bank transaction |
A bank payment alone may not explain what was bought.
Example:
Bank transaction: £84 paid to a supplier
The bank does not automatically show:
- what was bought,
- whether it was for business,
- whether VAT was charged,
- whether the supplier was VAT registered,
- which category it belongs to.
The receipt explains the transaction.
That is why receipts should be stored with the expense record.
Supplier bills
Supplier bills show what the business owes.
A bill may be paid later.
A supplier bill should usually record:
| Bill field | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Supplier name | Shows who needs paying |
| Bill number | Supports supplier tracking |
| Bill date | Shows when bill was issued |
| Due date | Shows when payment is expected |
| Description | Explains goods or services |
| Net amount | Amount before VAT if relevant |
| VAT amount | Supports VAT records |
| Gross amount | Total owed |
| Payment status | Paid, unpaid or part-paid |
| Evidence attachment | Supports record |
| Category | Supports reports |
Supplier bills are important because the bank balance may look strong before bills are paid.
Unpaid bills are future claims on cash.
A business should know what is owed before deciding that cash is free.
Aged payables records
Aged payables show unpaid supplier bills.
They are the supplier-side version of aged receivables.
Aged payables should show:
| Payable detail | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Supplier name | Shows who is owed |
| Bill number | Identifies the bill |
| Bill date | Shows when bill was issued |
| Due date | Shows urgency |
| Amount outstanding | Shows unpaid balance |
| Age of debt | Shows how late payment is |
| Payment priority | Supports cash planning |
| Dispute notes | Explains delay |
| Part-payment history | Shows what has been paid |
| Credit notes | Corrects supplier balance |
Aged payables help answer:
Who does the business need to pay, and when?
A future guide in this series is What Is Aged Payables?.
Bank records
Bank records show cash movement.
They include:
| Bank record | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Bank statements | Official cash movement |
| Bank feed transactions | Imported cash activity |
| Payment references | Helps match invoices and bills |
| Transfers | Shows movement between accounts |
| Bank charges | Shows fees |
| Loan payments | Supports debt tracking |
| HMRC payments | Shows tax or VAT payments |
| Payment processor deposits | Supports customer receipt matching |
| Cash deposits | Needs explanation |
| Owner/director transfers | Supports capital, drawings or loan records |
Bank records are important, but they are not enough alone.
A bank transaction says money moved.
It does not always say why.
That is why bank records need reconciliation.
For the full guide, read Why Reconciliation Matters.
VAT records
If the business is VAT registered, VAT records are essential.
VAT records may include:
| VAT record | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| VAT account | Summarises VAT charged and VAT paid |
| Sales VAT invoices | Shows VAT charged to customers |
| Purchase VAT invoices | Supports VAT on purchases |
| Receipts | Supports smaller purchase VAT |
| Credit notes | Corrects sales or purchase VAT |
| Debit notes | Corrects or increases records |
| VAT return copies | Shows submitted figures |
| VAT submission confirmations | Shows filing happened |
| VAT payment records | Shows payment to HMRC |
| VAT reclaim records | Shows repayment due or received |
| Import/export evidence | Supports cross-border VAT |
| Reverse charge records | Supports special VAT treatment |
| Bad debt records if relevant | Supports bad debt relief |
| Digital VAT records | Supports software and MTD workflow |
VAT records usually need to be kept for several years after filing.
The important practical point is:
Do not delete VAT evidence after the VAT return is submitted.
The return is only the summary.
The records explain the return.
For the detailed VAT guide, read What Records Do You Need for VAT?.
Payroll records
If the business employs people, payroll records matter.
Payroll records may include:
| Payroll record | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Employee details | Supports payroll setup |
| Pay records | Shows wages or salary |
| Tax deducted | Supports PAYE records |
| National Insurance deducted | Supports payroll reporting |
| Employer NI | Supports employer cost |
| Pension contributions | Supports workplace pension duties |
| Statutory pay records | Sick pay, maternity pay or similar |
| Benefits and expenses | Supports reporting where relevant |
| RTI submissions | Shows payroll reporting to HMRC |
| Payslips | Evidence for employees |
| Payroll payment records | Shows wages paid |
| HMRC payment records | Shows PAYE/NIC paid |
PAYE records should be kept for the required period after the tax year they relate to.
If the business has staff, payroll records should be treated seriously.
Payroll mistakes can affect employees, HMRC reporting and business cash flow.
Company records for limited companies
Limited companies need stronger records because the company is a separate legal entity.
Company records may include:
| Company record | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Company registration details | Shows legal identity |
| Directors | Shows who manages the company |
| Shareholders | Shows ownership |
| Persons with significant control | Supports company control records |
| Registered office | Official company address |
| Company registers | Statutory company records |
| Board decisions | Supports important company actions |
| Share issues or transfers | Supports ownership changes |
| Company accounts | Shows annual financial position |
| Company Tax Return records | Supports Corporation Tax |
| Director loan account records | Tracks director/company money |
| Dividend records | Supports shareholder distributions |
| Payroll records if directors/employees paid | Supports salary records |
| Contracts and agreements | Supports business obligations |
A director may hire an accountant, but the director remains responsible for company records and accounts.
Company money and personal money should not be treated as the same thing.
For the balance sheet view, read What a Balance Sheet Actually Tells You.
Asset records
Assets are things the business owns or controls.
Asset records may include:
| Asset type | Records to keep |
|---|---|
| Equipment | Purchase invoice, serial number, business use |
| Laptop or computer | Invoice, business/private use note |
| Tools | Purchase receipts and business purpose |
| Vehicles | Purchase documents, finance, insurance, mileage |
| Machinery | Purchase invoice, maintenance records |
| Furniture | Invoice and location |
| Stock | Purchase records, stock count, write-offs |
| Software licences | Purchase/subscription documents |
| Property improvements | Invoices, contracts, review notes |
Asset records matter because some purchases last beyond one period.
They may affect the balance sheet, depreciation, tax treatment, insurance and future sale/disposal records.
Large or unusual purchases should be reviewed carefully.
Stock records
Businesses that sell goods need stock records.
Stock records may include:
| Stock record | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Purchases | Shows goods bought |
| Sales | Shows goods sold |
| Stock count | Shows quantity held |
| Damaged stock | Explains write-offs |
| Returned stock | Supports refunds or credit notes |
| Opening stock | Supports period start |
| Closing stock | Supports period end |
| Cost of stock | Supports profit and margin |
| Supplier records | Supports purchase evidence |
| Import records if relevant | Supports VAT/customs evidence |
Stock affects profit, cash flow and working capital.
A business can have high stock value and still weak cash.
For working capital, read What Working Capital Means in a Small Business.
Contract and agreement records
Contracts and agreements explain the business relationship behind transactions.
Useful records include:
| Contract record | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Customer contracts | Shows agreed work and payment terms |
| Supplier contracts | Shows supplier obligations |
| Quotes and proposals | Supports customer agreement |
| Purchase orders | Supports customer approval |
| Terms and conditions | Supports payment and cancellation terms |
| Deposit terms | Explains advance payments |
| Project scope | Reduces disputes |
| Service level agreements | Defines delivery expectations |
| Lease agreements | Supports rent and property costs |
| Loan agreements | Supports debt records |
| Insurance documents | Supports coverage |
| Employment contracts | Supports staff records |
Contracts help explain why money moved.
They are especially useful when there is a dispute, late payment, refund, cancellation or unusual invoice.
For deposits, read Should You Take Deposits From Customers?.
Tax records
Tax records vary by business type.
A business may need to keep records supporting:
| Tax area | Possible records |
|---|---|
| Self Assessment | Business income and expenses |
| Corporation Tax | Company accounts and tax computation |
| VAT | VAT account, VAT invoices and returns |
| PAYE | Payroll records and HMRC submissions |
| CIS | Contractor/subcontractor records if relevant |
| Capital allowances | Asset purchase records |
| Director loans | Company/director money movement |
| Dividends | Dividend vouchers and board minutes |
| Benefits and expenses | Employer reporting records |
| Payments to HMRC | Tax payment confirmations |
Tax records should connect to the accounting records.
The numbers in tax returns should not appear from nowhere.
They should be traceable back to invoices, expenses, bank movement and reports.
Digital records and files
Modern business records are often digital.
Digital records may include:
| Digital record | Example |
|---|---|
| PDF invoices | Customer and supplier invoices |
| Receipt images | Photos or scans of receipts |
| Bank feed data | Imported bank transactions |
| Payment confirmations | Stripe, PayPal, card processor records |
| Emails | Customer approval, supplier agreement |
| Cloud files | Contracts, reports, evidence |
| Software records | Accounting system entries |
| Digital VAT records | VAT return support |
| Payroll software records | Employee pay records |
| Export files | CSV, PDF, ZIP records for accountant |
Digital records should be organised.
A folder full of random screenshots is better than nothing, but it is not ideal.
Good digital records should be searchable, linked to transactions and backed up.
How long to keep records
Record retention depends on business type and record type.
A beginner-friendly summary:
| Record type | General retention idea |
|---|---|
| Self-employed business records | At least 5 years after the 31 January submission deadline for the relevant tax year |
| Limited company records | Usually 6 years from the end of the company financial year they relate to, sometimes longer |
| VAT records | Usually at least 6 years, with longer periods for some schemes |
| PAYE records | Usually 3 years from the end of the tax year they relate to |
| Asset records | Keep while asset is owned and for relevant tax/accounting period after |
| Contracts | Keep while active and for a sensible period after obligations end |
| Company statutory records | Keep as part of company history where required |
This article gives a practical overview.
Some records may need to be kept longer depending on the situation.
If a transaction covers more than one accounting period, involves long-lasting assets, relates to a compliance check, or supports ongoing obligations, keep it longer and ask for advice if unsure.
Paper vs digital records
Records can often be kept digitally, but the digital copy must be reliable.
A good digital record should be:
| Quality | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Complete | Shows all relevant details |
| Legible | Easy to read |
| Linked | Connected to the transaction |
| Searchable | Easy to find later |
| Backed up | Protected from loss |
| Dated | Shows when it relates |
| Categorised | Connected to income, expense, VAT or payroll |
| Secure | Protected from unauthorised access |
If a receipt photo is blurry, cropped or missing VAT detail, it may be weak.
If a file is saved with no name, no category and no transaction link, it may be hard to use later.
Digital records are powerful when organised.
They are weak when scattered.
Records for accountant export
Good records make accountant review easier.
An accountant-ready pack might include:
| Export item | Why it helps |
|---|---|
| Sales list | Shows income |
| Invoice list | Shows customer charges |
| Customer payment list | Shows cash received |
| Expense list | Shows costs |
| Supplier bill list | Shows payables |
| Receipt folder | Supports expenses |
| Bank statement or feed | Supports cash movement |
| Reconciliation report | Shows matched/unmatched transactions |
| VAT report | Supports VAT review if registered |
| Payroll report | Supports employer records if relevant |
| Balance sheet | Shows position |
| Profit and loss | Shows performance |
| Aged receivables | Shows customers owed |
| Aged payables | Shows suppliers owed |
| Notes on unusual items | Helps review complex transactions |
Cleaner records usually mean calmer accountant work.
They also reduce questions, corrections and missing-document stress.
Records to review every week
Some records should be checked weekly in active businesses.
| Weekly record | Why review weekly |
|---|---|
| Bank transactions | Finds unexplained cash movement |
| Customer payments | Keeps invoices up to date |
| Unpaid invoices | Supports chasing |
| Supplier bills due soon | Supports cash planning |
| New expenses | Stops receipts being lost |
| Missing receipts | Fixes evidence gaps early |
| Large payments | Prevents surprise |
| VAT-sensitive items | Flags review before return |
| Owner/director transfers | Prevents money confusion |
Weekly review is not about perfection.
It is about catching problems early.
Records to review monthly
Monthly review is where records become reports.
| Monthly record area | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Profit and loss | Shows performance |
| Bank reconciliation | Confirms cash records |
| Aged receivables | Shows unpaid customer money |
| Aged payables | Shows unpaid supplier bills |
| Expense categories | Shows cost trends |
| VAT report if registered | Supports VAT reserve and return |
| Balance sheet | Shows wider position |
| Asset records | Tracks major purchases |
| Payroll summary if employer | Supports pay records |
| Missing evidence list | Cleans records before year-end |
A future guide in this series is Month-End Checklist for a Small Business.
Common recordkeeping mistakes
Mistake 1: Keeping only bank statements
Bank statements show movement, but not the full business reason.
Mistake 2: Losing receipts
Receipts are evidence. Missing receipts weaken expense and VAT records.
Mistake 3: Not matching payments
Customer and supplier balances become wrong if payments are unmatched.
Mistake 4: Mixing personal and business spending
This creates confusion and weakens reports.
Mistake 5: Treating invoices as cash
Invoices show what was charged, not what was paid.
Mistake 6: Not keeping VAT evidence
VAT records need proper invoices and receipts.
Mistake 7: Forgetting credit notes and refunds
Corrections should link to original records.
Mistake 8: Not keeping payroll records
Employers need clear pay and deduction evidence.
Mistake 9: Waiting until year-end
Records are easier to keep during the year than rebuild later.
Mistake 10: Keeping files but not organising them
A document that cannot be found is almost as bad as a document that was never kept.
Small business recordkeeping checklist
Use this checklist as a starting point.
| Record | Keep? |
|---|---|
| Sales invoices | ☐ |
| Customer payment records | ☐ |
| Aged receivables | ☐ |
| Supplier bills | ☐ |
| Expense receipts | ☐ |
| Aged payables | ☐ |
| Bank statements | ☐ |
| Bank reconciliation reports | ☐ |
| VAT records if registered | ☐ |
| VAT return copies and confirmations | ☐ |
| Payroll records if employer | ☐ |
| Company records if limited company | ☐ |
| Contracts and agreements | ☐ |
| Asset and equipment records | ☐ |
| Stock records if goods business | ☐ |
| Loan and finance agreements | ☐ |
| Tax payment confirmations | ☐ |
| Accountant export files | ☐ |
| Notes on unusual transactions | ☐ |
| Backups of digital files | ☐ |
This checklist helps the business build a record system instead of a record pile.
Final summary
A small business should keep records that explain its money.
Good records show:
- what was sold,
- what was bought,
- who paid,
- who still owes money,
- who needs to be paid,
- what evidence exists,
- whether VAT applies,
- whether tax records are supported,
- whether payroll records are complete,
- whether company records are maintained,
- whether reports can be trusted.
The main lesson is simple:
Records are not admin clutter. They are proof.
They support accounting, tax, VAT, payroll, cash flow, reports, accountant review and business confidence.
A business with good records can answer questions calmly.
A business with weak records has to guess.
Good accounting starts with keeping the right evidence in the right place.