Tracking business finances can be easier than it sounds
Running a business means money moves in different directions. Client payments come in, subscriptions go out, taxes need to be set aside, and your own salary needs to fit into the picture too.
A simple tracking system helps you understand what came in, what went out, what is already reserved, and what is safe to use next. That makes everyday decisions easier, whether you are buying new equipment, preparing for a quieter month, or deciding how much to pay yourself.
You do not need an accountant for every day-to-day money question. An accountant can help with filings, tax advice, and official reporting. But for regular visibility, you can build a simple system that helps you understand how money moves through your business.
The goal is not to become a finance expert. It is to keep your business money easy to read, easy to organize, and easy to act on.
If you are still setting up your business banking, bunq’s guide to business banking basics can help you start with the right foundation.
Start with a separate Business Account
The easiest way to track business finances is to keep business money separate from personal money.
When client payments, groceries, subscriptions, tax savings, and personal spending all sit in the same account, your balance becomes harder to trust. A dedicated Business Account gives your income and expenses one clear home.
Use it for:
Client and customer payments
Business subscriptions
Equipment and tools
Travel and transport
Tax reserves
Payments to yourself
This makes your records cleaner and your decisions faster. You no longer need to sort through personal transactions to understand what your business can afford.
A Business Bank Account gives you a dedicated place to manage your business money online, without paperwork.
Create accounts for how your business actually works
One balance tells you how much money you have. Separate accounts help you see what that money is for.
That matters because not every euro in your account is available to spend. Some money may be for tax. Some may be for VAT. Some may need to cover tools, subscriptions, or your next slower month.
A clear setup could include:
Income: where client or customer payments arrive
Tax: money set aside for income tax
VAT: money collected on behalf of the tax authority
Operating costs: tools, software, workspace, and transport
Owner pay: money you plan to pay yourself
Buffer: money for quieter months or delayed payments
Growth: money for equipment, marketing, hiring, or training
This turns your account balance into a practical business overview. Instead of asking, “Can I afford this?”, you can see which money is already reserved and which money is free to use.
With bunq, you can open up to 25 different Bank Accounts, checking or savings, each with its own IBAN. That makes it easier to organize your money by purpose instead of keeping everything in one place.
Track income when it arrives
Sent invoices are useful, but they are not the same as available money.
If you sent €6,000 in invoices and only €2,000 has arrived, your business has €2,000 available. The rest is expected income. Keeping that difference clear helps you avoid spending money before it lands.
Track every invoice in 3 stages:
Sent: the invoice has gone out. Add the amount and due date to your tracker.
Paid: the money has arrived. Move it into the right accounts before spending.
Overdue: the payment deadline has passed. Follow up with the client.
Once income arrives, divide it before you spend it. Move tax money aside, separate VAT if relevant, cover operating costs, add to your buffer, then decide what is available for owner pay or growth.
This habit keeps your business balance more accurate. You are not looking at one large number and guessing. You are looking at money that already has a purpose.
Keep business expenses easy to review
Tracking expenses is not just about saving receipts. It is about understanding where your business money goes.
Start with clear categories:
Software and subscriptions
Marketing and ads
Travel and transport
Equipment
Workspace
Professional services
Taxes and fees
Team expenses, if you have employees
Then check your spending regularly. Which costs help you earn money? Which save you time? Which subscriptions are no longer useful? Which expenses are growing quietly?
This helps you make better business decisions, not just cleaner records.
If you manage spending across a team, Expense Management can help you track employee expenses, set limits, request receipts, and connect spending with your accounting software.
Set tax money aside before you pay yourself
Tax feels easier when it does not sit in the same place as spendable money.
When income arrives, move tax money aside first. If you charge VAT, separate that too. This helps keep your everyday balance closer to the money you can actually use.
A simple flow can look like this:
Income arrives
Move tax money into a separate account
Move VAT into a separate account, if relevant
Cover operating costs
Add money to your buffer
Pay yourself from what is left
The exact amount to set aside depends on your country, income, business type, and tax situation. Check with a tax professional when needed. The habit is what matters: separate tax before making spending decisions.
For more context, read bunq’s guide on how to manage banking and taxes as a freelancer in Europe.
Build a buffer for quieter months
A business buffer gives you room to keep moving when income is less predictable.
It helps when a client pays late, a project moves, seasonal demand slows down, or you want to invest before new income arrives. Even 1 month of core business costs can make your business feel more stable.
Keep your buffer separate from daily spending, so it stays available when you need it. A Business Savings Account can help you separate money for tax, slower months, or future investments.
You can also read bunq’s blog on whether you should open a Business Savings Account if you want to understand when it makes sense for your business.
Watch cash flow, not just profit
Profit shows whether your business earns more than it spends. Cash flow shows whether the money is there when you need it.
That matters when:
Clients pay later than expected
Tax payments are coming up
Annual subscriptions renew
Seasonal work slows down
You want to invest before new income arrives
You hold or receive money in different currencies
Once a month, look ahead and write down your expected income, confirmed costs, tax payments, large upcoming expenses, and minimum buffer. Then check whether the money coming in covers the money going out.
If your business works across borders, international money movement can also affect your cash flow. bunq lets you send and receive payments across the world and hold or exchange 20+ currencies at competitive rates.
Manual tracking can work well when your business is small. As your business grows, automation can save time and reduce mistakes.
Bookkeeping integrations help keep your records up to date by connecting your bank account with the tools you already use. That means fewer manual exports, less copy-pasting, and a clearer view of your money.
bunq connects with 100+ bookkeeping integrations, so your books stay easier to manage as your business grows. Explore business integrations to see how your banking can work with your accounting setup.
Make your setup fit your business size
A freelancer does not need the same system as a growing company.
If you work alone, start with:
A dedicated business account
Separate accounts for tax, VAT, costs, and savings
A simple invoice tracker
A weekly money check
Basic expense categories
If you run a growing team, you may also need:
Employee Expense Management
Clear account permissions
The right system is the one that matches how your business works today, while giving you room to grow.
Do a weekly money check
You do not need to review your finances every day. You need a routine you can keep.
Once a week, check:
What income arrived
Which invoices are still unpaid
Which expenses came out
Which receipts are missing
How much should move to tax or VAT
Whether your buffer still feels right
What you can safely pay yourself
This keeps your finances visible without turning tracking into a full-time job. The more often you check in, the less you need to untangle later.
Know when to ask an accountant
Tracking helps you understand your business day to day. It does not replace professional advice.
Speak to an accountant or tax adviser when:
You file business taxes
You register for VAT
You hire employees or contractors
You work across borders
Your business structure changes
You are unsure what you can deduct
You need official financial statements
Your tracking system gives you a cleaner starting point. Your accountant can then help with the formal, legal, and technical side.
Keep your business finances easy to read
You do not need a complicated system to track business finances. You need a setup that shows what your money is for.
Start with this:
Use a dedicated business account
Create separate accounts for tax, VAT, costs, owner pay, and buffer
Track invoices as sent, paid, or overdue
Categorize expenses while they are fresh
Use cards with clear spending purposes
Review cash flow once a month
Do a weekly money check
Connect your banking to bookkeeping tools when manual tracking takes too much time
That is enough to make better day-to-day decisions. When your business money is easier to read, it is easier to know what you can spend, what you should save, and where your business needs attention next.
Explore bunq to set up a Business Account with multiple Bank Accounts, Company Cards, 20+ currencies, and bookkeeping integrations in one app.




