What This Means for You, Business Owner: January doesn’t fix December. It reveals whether December work was completed — and what still needs follow‑through. If you worked through the items we discussed in our December series, you should be in good shape. If not, this is your cue to go back and review those December posts. And while tax season may feel like it starts in April, the first real push happens in January — and it lives with your bookkeeper.
There’s a common belief that January is where everything gets “cleaned up.”
As if a calendar flip magically resolves unanswered questions, missing documents, or undecided issues.
It doesn’t.
January isn’t magic — it’s follow‑through.
This post kicks off our January execution series, building on everything we covered in December about owner responsibility, timing, and preparation.
Here’s what January actually does:
- It applies deadlines to the information already provided
- It locks in decisions that were made — or defaults decisions that weren’t
- It exposes gaps that can no longer be corrected easily
When December work is done well, January feels steady and predictable. When it isn’t, January feels rushed, expensive, and stressful.
That difference isn’t about effort. It’s about timing.
By January:
- Bookkeepers are completing full reconciliations and verification of the prior year
- Payroll and sales tax filings are being reviewed and prepared for submission to the appropriate agencies
- January bookkeeping is happening at the same time as year‑end work
- CPAs are not working from finalized books yet — they don’t begin tax prep until they receive completed books from bookkeepers, which typically happens in February or March depending on your entity type
This is the Super Bowl of bookkeeping season.
While April is intense for tax preparers, January is where the heaviest lift happens for bookkeepers.
January doesn’t reopen December. It works with what’s available — while also juggling new month activity.
That’s why timing, clarity, and responsiveness matter more than urgency.
Key takeaway:
January cleanup isn’t about fixing the past — it’s about following through together during the busiest season of the bookkeeping year.
Your action item:
Give your bookkeeper time and clarity during January. Respond promptly to questions, provide requested documents as quickly as you can, and communicate clearly — this is not the month to let things sit.
And if you’re able? A well‑timed coffee, thank‑you note, or simple acknowledgment goes a long way during this Super Bowl stretch.
If you haven’t already, the Year‑End Financial Checklist is still the fastest way to see what January will be working with.
No bookkeeper yet? January is often where gaps become visible. This series will help you understand what bookkeepers are managing behind the scenes — and why shared responsibility is what actually gets books closed.