What This Means for You, Business Owner: January is not the time to decide what expenses were — it’s the time to finalize decisions that should have been made earlier. Uncategorized items in January show where decisions stalled.
January is not when bookkeeping decisions should begin — it’s when they are confirmed and closed.
December was about identifying missing information. January is about executing on those decisions.
This post is part of our December–February 3‑month series, where January’s role is follow‑through — not new decision‑making.
By January, uncategorized (or similarly named) items usually fall into one of two buckets:
• Items that were flagged and never responded to
• Items where the owner intended to follow up “later” — and didn’t
At this stage, uncategorized items are no longer neutral placeholders — they are evidence that a year‑end decision didn’t happen when it should have. They’re active blockers.
Here’s what unresolved items signal in January:
- Owner questions went unanswered
- Receipts or explanations weren’t provided
- Decisions were deferred past reasonable timelines
- The bookkeeper cannot move forward without guessing
And guessing isn’t bookkeeping.
When these items remain unresolved:
- Reconciliations pause
- Year‑end accuracy is compromised
- Tax preparers step in later and make corrections
- Those corrections often happen via journal entries owners never revisit
Some firms — including mine — will ultimately move unresolved items to owner draw / owner contribution when documentation isn’t provided.
Not as a penalty — but as protection.
Because without proof, an expense cannot be defended as ordinary and necessary.
Another January reality: Even if you insist something should be expensed, a tax preparer may reverse it during year‑end review.
Why? Because their professional license is on the line — not preference.
Key takeaway:
January is not the month to decide what expenses were. It’s the month to close out decisions already in motion — and uncategorized items show exactly where follow‑through is missing.
Your action item:
Ask your bookkeeper for a list of unresolved or uncategorized items. Set aside focused time to respond and close them out — not piecemeal, not later.
If you disagree with treatment, loop in your tax preparer before forcing a decision.
No bookkeeper yet? When uncategorized items pile up in January, it’s a sign the system — not just the software — needs attention.