Real price ranges, what drives the cost, and how to get an accurate quote — a clear look at bookkeeping fees for small business.
Understanding bookkeeping fees for small business up front helps you budget and avoid surprise invoices. What moves the price is transaction volume, how many accounts you run, and whether payroll and sales tax are in the mix.
There’s a hidden cost to do-it-yourself books that never shows up on an invoice: the hours spent categorizing transactions are hours you’re not selling, serving customers, or off the clock. Handing the ledger to a specialist buys those hours back.
Think of us as the finance department a small business can’t yet justify hiring: we keep small-business bookkeeping accurate and on schedule, catch the miscodes and missed deductions before they cost you, and scale the work up as you grow — all for one predictable fee.
| Business size | Typical monthly cost | What drives it |
|---|---|---|
| Solo / very small | $200–$500 | Low volume, one account |
| Growing small business | $500–$1,200 | Payroll, AR/AP, multiple accounts |
| Established SMB | $1,000–$2,500+ | High volume, multi-entity, job costing |
| Catch-up / cleanup | Quoted per project | Months behind or messy data |
Hourly help runs roughly $40–$100 an hour, but most established firms prefer a flat monthly fee so you know the cost up front. A full-time in-house bookkeeper costs far more once you add salary, benefits, payroll taxes, and software — which is why outsourced bookkeeping often wins on price.


At Numerawise Solutions, bookkeeping is the core of what we do — not a side service. We’re QuickBooks specialists who handle setup, cleanup, and full QuickBooks setup and migration, and we pair the books with payroll services and outsourced bookkeeping so one team covers your whole back office. You get accurate monthly reports, a real person who answers when you email, and books that stay ready for your CPA all year.
There’s no flat sticker price, and anyone who quotes one before looking at your file is guessing. The real answer to bookkeeping fees for small business comes from a quick review of your books. Clean books almost always cost less than the mistakes messy ones create.
Most small businesses pay between $200 and $2,500 per month, depending on transaction volume, number of accounts, and whether payroll and sales tax are included. Solo owners sit at the low end; higher-volume or multi-entity businesses pay more. A cleanup is priced separately, and a quick file review gives you an accurate number.
Usually, yes. A full-time bookkeeper comes with salary, payroll taxes, benefits, and software, which can run several thousand dollars a month. Outsourcing gives you a whole team for a set monthly fee plus coverage when someone’s out — without the overhead of another employee.
Flat monthly pricing is easier to plan around and is what most established firms offer. Hourly help works for one-off projects, but a surprise hourly invoice is harder to budget. Ask exactly what’s included so you can compare fairly.
A cleanup fixes months of miscoded, unreconciled records before ongoing work can start. It’s priced by scope because the effort depends on how far behind and how messy the file is. Once you’re current, monthly service is far cheaper than repeated cleanups.
Typically transaction recording, monthly bank and credit card reconciliation, and financial reports (profit and loss, balance sheet, cash flow). Payroll, sales tax filing, and AP/AR are often add-ons. Confirm the exact scope so the fee matches the work you actually need.
Not directly — it’s transaction volume and complexity that drive cost, not revenue alone. A high-revenue business with a few large invoices can be cheaper to keep than a low-revenue shop with hundreds of small transactions and multiple accounts.
Share recent bank and card statements and access to your accounting file. A provider reviews the volume, number of accounts, and condition of the data, then quotes a flat monthly fee. Skip the ballpark numbers online — a real quote is tied to your actual books.
Yes. Keep business and personal spending separate, connect your bank feeds, and stay current so nothing turns into a cleanup. Clean inputs make clean books, which keeps your monthly fee lower and your reports accurate.
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