Choosing an accountant
What's the difference between a bookkeeper and an accountant?
By Pick My Accountant Editorial · Updated 8 July 2026
What each one actually does
A bookkeeper keeps the ledger truthful: invoices raised and chased, purchases categorised, bank accounts reconciled, receipts captured, often VAT returns prepared and payroll run. An accountant takes that ledger and produces statutory accounts, corporation tax or self assessment returns, and advice — dividend vs salary, capital purchases, forecasting, and dealing with HMRC on your behalf.
Which does your business need first?
If you're drowning in receipts and unreconciled bank feeds, that's a bookkeeping problem — solving it is cheaper than paying an accountant to untangle it at year end. If your records are tidy but you're unsure about tax, structure, or filings, you need an accountant. Very small businesses with software doing the heavy lifting often need only an accountant's annual package.
The bundled option
Most online-first firms now sell one monthly package covering software, bookkeeping review, VAT, payroll, and year-end work — effectively both roles under one engagement letter. It's often the simplest answer for limited companies; compare what's genuinely included, because 'bookkeeping' ranges from full transaction processing to a quarterly tidy-up.
People also ask
Can a bookkeeper file my tax return?
Some AAT-licensed bookkeepers are also licensed for self assessment work. For limited company accounts and corporation tax you generally want a qualified accountant.
Is it worth doing my own bookkeeping?
With modern software and bank feeds, many owners handle it in an hour or two a week. The test: if your accountant regularly sends 'query lists' at year end, your DIY bookkeeping is costing you in fees.
What software should I use?
Xero, QuickBooks, and FreeAgent dominate the UK small-business market and every firm we list supports at least one. Pick whichever your accountant or bookkeeper knows best — their efficiency is your saving.
This article is general information for UK businesses, not tax, legal, or financial advice, and thresholds change — confirm current rules on GOV.UK or with a qualified accountant before acting. Fee figures are indicative benchmarks from ourmethodology.