Keeping business records

Keeping business records

Business records you must keep if you're self-employed

  • all receipts for goods and stock
  • bank statements, chequebook stubs
  • sales invoices, till rolls and bank slips
  • all sales and income
  • all business expenses
  • VAT records if you're registered for VAT
  • PAYE records if you employ people
  • records about your personal income
  • your grant, if you claimed through the Self-Employment Income Support Scheme because of coronavirus

Records you must keep if your running a limited company

  • all money received and spent by the company, including grants and payments from coronavirus support schemes
  • details of assets owned by the company
  • debts the company owes or is owed
  • stock the company owns at the end of the financial year
  • the stocktakings you used to work out the stock figure
  • all goods bought and sold
  • who you bought and sold them to and from (unless you run a retail business)
  • all money spent by the company, for example receipts, petty cash books, orders and delivery notes
  • all money received by the company, for example invoices, contracts, sales books and till rolls
  • any other relevant documents, for example bank statements and correspondence

You must keep details of:

  • directors, shareholders and company secretaries
  • the results of any shareholder votes and resolutions
  • promises for the company to repay loans at a specific date in the future ('debentures') and who they must be paid back to
  • promises the company makes for payments if something goes wrong and it's the company's fault ('indemnities')
  • transactions when someone buys shares in the company
  • loans or mortgages secured against the company's assets

How long must I keep financial records?

  • Limited companies - 6 years from the end of the last company financial year they relate to
  • Self employed - 5 years after the 31 January submission deadline of the relevant tax year