Commercial lawn care is a business and the IRS (Internal Revenue Service) requires that you report your net ordinary income and pay self-employment taxes on that income at least quarterly. Net ordinary income is what is left after you subtract ordinary expenses such as gas, oil, parts, belts, insurance premiums, employee expenses, etc.
If you have employees you must either higher them as contractors making them 1099 employees or pay their income taxes, Social Security and Medicare taxes.
That sounds like a lot of paperwork and it sounds intimidating. Anytime anyone says “IRS” I know I feel intimidated.
How do you keep track of all this stuff without losing your sanity?
It’s not as hard as you think. There are several computer-based software packages that can track all this for you and all you have to do is enter the information accurately and correctly. I use Quickbooks by Intuit because you can start very small with it and as your business grows, you can upgrade to more advanced versions and add packages as needed.
If you are just starting out, you can begin with Quickbooks Simple Start. It contains the essentials of bookkeeping; managing sales revenue, customers, employees and expenses in an easy format to learn and use while maintaining real accounting records so you can file your quarterly and annual tax returns properly. At a cost of under $100, it is a great bargain. Pros: it is easy to learn and use. Cons: it only runs on Windows-based PCs. I’m sure Intuit will make a Mac version if they get enough requests for it. 
Once your business grows, you need to upgrade to Quickbooks Pro. This software package runs on both Windows PCs and Macs. It will import all your information from Simple Start and is much more powerful. It does everything that Simple Start does plus:
- Handles paying employees, bill tracking, invoicing and writing checks
- Keeps track of sales revenue and expenses
- Allows you to import data into Microsoft Word or Excel
- Let’s you stay on top of things by showing you who owes your money and what bills are coming due
- Has over 100 built in reporting templates
- Let’s you create professional grade custom forms
- Track vehicle and equipment depreciation
Quickbooks Pro costs under $200 and is well worth the price. Other packages can be added to it (for some extra money) to accept credit card payments directly, process an unlimited number of employees payroll and manage invoices.
Personally, I use Quickbooks Pro. My accountant recommends it, and when I started my business they hadn’t created the Simple Start edition yet.
Once you’ve been around the block more than a few years and you’re making enough to higher two or more office workers, you can upgrade to Quickbooks Premier Contractor Edition or Industry Specific Edition. Accounting software this powerful isn’t really necessary unless more than one person needs to be able to work on the company’s file at the same time. You would also want to control who can use the file and how much of it they can access, and this package allows you that kind of control.
I don’t have any employees and I enter my own data, so I don’t need this much power. I don’t plan to grow my company to the point where I would need this much power either, but you may want to do it.
Regardless of the size of your company, you must keep track of expenses, revenue and taxes so you need at least Quickbooks Simple Start. Some people use Quicken Home and Business or Quicken Premier, but those are not accounting software packages. They are money tracking packages and reports generated using them could result in an IRS audit because they don’t prevent you from deleting accounts and entries. Quickbooks won’t allow you to delete things that standard accounting rules don’t allow and your accountant will be much happier with you. 
How do you get rid of the mistaken entries you make and closed checking and other accounts? You make entries to reverse the mistaken entries and you zero out closed checking and savings accounts. The software keeps track of them because they were used for past transactions. This may seem trivial until the IRS comes knocking on your door wanting to see all your records. They have an expectation that even if you don’t know bookkeeping you should either higher a bookkeeper or use a software package to keep your books for you.
Let’s review:
- You need an IRS acceptable way to keep track of your business finances
- Start with Quickbooks Simple Start
- Upgrade to Quickbooks Pro (or you can start here)
- If you have a larger business with multiple file users, upgrade to Quickbooks Premier Contractor’s Edition or Quickbooks Premier Industry Specific Edition
- If you refuse to keep up with your expenses and revenue yourself, higher a bookkeeper
- If you use Intuit TurboTax to do your taxes, all Quickbooks editions allow data to be extracted from your company file directly into TurboTax
- Other tax software may also allow you to import data directly from Quickbooks; just read the box to determine compatibility
- If you don’t do your own taxes higher a CPA
That’s commercial lawn care business bookkeeping in a nutshell. If you have any questions or thoughts please leave them in the comments below.
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October 27th, 2008 at 12:37 pm
I got a question from a fellow lawn care guy and he asked about Peachtree or Microsoft Office Accounting Professional. As long as they are real accounting programs, they will pass the IRS smell test.
But most accountants, at least here locally, don’t like use MS Office Accounting. A few will accept Peachtree, but most prefer Quickbooks. When I was looking for an accountant back in the day in the Yellow Pages, most listed Quickbooks in their YP ads if they accepted software. You might want to check locally in your own phone book or local search for accountants in your area. Call some and see which software files they accept and prefer from small business clients.
January 15th, 2009 at 2:10 pm
One of the most diffficult tasks is record keeping. You mow all day, you’re tired, you’ll do it later – and later never comes. Learn from the mistakes of others…either pay a bookkeeper and tax person now or pay the big bad IRS later. If you can’t afford a record keeper and tax person you’re not making money anyway – get out of your losing business before you get into IRS trouble. Thanks for the challenging and helpful info. Incidentally, for the little guy or teenager who wants to put his toe in the water, check out http://www.bestratedlawnmowers.com for info on lawn mowers. If the business starts to grow, they’ll need to move to pro equipment – but a good home unit might get them started on the cheap.
May 1st, 2009 at 3:43 pm
If you had a small yard you could just sell your gas mower and buy a reel mower. That would save you a ton of money.
August 30th, 2009 at 9:49 pm
How did it cost to start up this blog…I want to start my own.
September 6th, 2009 at 8:54 pm
Jose R.,
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