Introduction
Many incorporated business owners have a bookkeeper managing their day-to-day financial records and a CPA preparing their year-end returns. In theory, this is an efficient division of labour. In practice, the handoff between the two is often where compliance problems — and planning opportunities — are lost.
This article explains the distinct roles of bookkeepers and CPAs, what to expect from each, and why ensuring they are working in coordination is part of running a well-managed corporation.
What a Bookkeeper Does
A bookkeeper is responsible for maintaining the financial records of the business on an ongoing basis. This includes recording transactions (income, expenses, bank deposits, credit card charges), reconciling bank and credit card accounts, categorising expenses, managing accounts payable and receivable, and keeping the books current through the year.
A good bookkeeper ensures that when year-end arrives, the CPA has clean, accurate records to work from. The quality of the CPA's work — and the reliability of the tax return — depends heavily on the quality of the bookkeeping that underpins it.
Bookkeepers in Canada are not required to hold a professional designation, though many do through organisations such as the Institute of Professional Bookkeepers of Canada (IPBC). A bookkeeper's role is operational — maintaining the record. It is generally not to provide tax advice, prepare returns, or make judgments about how income or expenses are classified for tax purposes.
What a CPA Does
A Chartered Professional Accountant (CPA) is a licensed professional who holds a nationally recognised designation. CPAs can prepare and sign financial statements, file corporate and personal tax returns, provide tax advice, represent clients in CRA matters, and provide assurance services.
For an incorporated business, the CPA's role typically includes preparing the T2 corporate tax return and supporting schedules, preparing personal tax returns for the shareholder, advising on compensation strategy, reviewing the corporate structure, and providing input on any CRA correspondence or audit activity.
The CPA's role is professional and regulated. CPAs are subject to the standards and oversight of CPA Canada and their provincial body.
Where the Gap Often Occurs
The most common failure point in the bookkeeper-CPA relationship is categorisation.
A bookkeeper categorises transactions based on their understanding of the business and the chart of accounts they have been given. But not every categorisation decision is straightforward. Is a particular piece of software capital equipment or a current expense? Are meals with a certain client deductible at 100% or 50%? Is a vehicle expense claim appropriately supported by a logbook?
These are questions with tax implications — questions that belong to the CPA, not the bookkeeper. When categorisation decisions are made by a bookkeeper without CPA input, errors can persist for years before they are caught, often during a CRA review.
Conversely, if the CPA receives disorganised or inaccurate records at year-end, additional time is spent sorting through transactions rather than reviewing the tax position and identifying planning opportunities.
The Role of Technology
Cloud accounting platforms — QuickBooks Online, Xero, and similar tools — have made real-time collaboration between bookkeepers and CPAs easier. A CPA with access to the same platform as the bookkeeper can review categorisations throughout the year, flag issues as they arise, and avoid year-end surprises.
This model — where the CPA is not just a once-a-year filer but a continuous presence in the client's financial records — produces significantly better outcomes than the traditional model where books are handed over in March and the return is filed in June.
What Business Owners Should Expect
An incorporated business owner should be able to expect that:
Their bookkeeper maintains accurate, current records throughout the year in a format the CPA can use.
Their CPA reviews the books before year-end filing, not only at year-end filing — and identifies issues, not just reports them after the fact.
Both the bookkeeper and CPA communicate with each other, not just with the business owner separately.
There are no surprises at filing time — no large tax bills that were not anticipated, no major adjustments to the bookkeeper's work that result in material differences in the financial statements.
When to Speak With a CPA
If your current setup involves a bookkeeper you see regularly and a CPA you hear from once a year at filing time, it may be worth asking whether the two are working effectively together — and whether your CPA is playing an advisory role or primarily a compliance role.
Rotaru CPA works with incorporated professionals to maintain financial systems that produce clean, accurate records year-round — not just at tax time. Book a consultation to discuss how your current setup could be improved.