Bookkeeping packages explained: what you’re paying for (and what you’re not)
You've spent three days comparing bookkeeping providers. Every website shows packages with confident names like "Professional" or "Growth Plus." The descriptions blur together, transaction categorization, monthly reconciliation, and financial statements. One charges $800/month, another $1,400, and they both claim full-service bookkeeping.
Here's the problem: most consulting founders don't realize that "full-service" in bookkeeping has a particular meaning. It covers the monthly close cycle. What doesn't it cover? Half the services you actually need to run a consulting firm.
This is why many firms end up layering payroll, reimbursements, contractor payments, and approvals on top of bookkeeping in an uncoordinated way, which quietly pushes costs higher as the business scales.
Standard bookkeeping packages include monthly transaction categorization, reconciliation, and basic financial statements, but exclude services that consulting firms rely on, such as project-level reporting, multi-entity support, and controller-level review, creating hidden costs that can add 50–100% to your expected budget.
This gap between advertised pricing and actual spend is why many founders feel surprised by what they end up paying over the course of a year.
Let me break down what you're actually getting.
What every bookkeeping package includes (the baseline)

These services show up in virtually every provider's base package, regardless of price tier.
Bank and credit card reconciliation is included by default, but usually only for one or two accounts, your main operating account and maybe one credit card. Need to reconcile your IOLTA account, a savings account, or multiple credit cards? That's often $50-150 per additional account monthly.
Transaction categorization is always included, but watch the volume limits. Many packages cap transactions at 100-150 per month. Consulting firms with regular contractor payments, client reimbursements, software subscriptions, and travel expenses blow through that limit quickly. Overage fees typically run $1-2 per transaction, adding $100-300/month without you realizing it.
Monthly financial statements sound straightforward until you read the fine print. Most packages provide a profit and loss statement and a balance sheet. Cash flow statements? Those are "available upon request" or require a higher tier. Statement of owner's equity? Forget it unless you're paying for controller-level service.
QuickBooks Online setup and cleanup are usually included in the onboarding process. They'll fix your chart of accounts, clean up duplicate vendors, and reconcile opening balances. This is genuinely valuable if you're switching from a messy system. But ongoing optimization? That happens during your monthly cycle, not as a separate deep-dive unless you pay extra.
The monthly close timeline matters too. Standard packages typically deliver financials 7-10 business days after month-end. Need them by the 5th for board meetings? Expedited close often costs $200-400 monthly as an add-on.
What costs extra in most bookkeeping packages
These features sound basic if you run a consulting firm, but providers consider them premium services.
Accounts receivable and accounts payable management are rarely included in base packages. Basic bookkeeping records the transactions after they happen. Actually creating invoices, sending payment reminders, entering bills, and scheduling payments? Different service tier entirely. Expect to pay an additional $300-600/month for AR/AP management, or handle it yourself and just have your bookkeeper record the results.
Multiple entity support hits consulting firms hard. Do you have an LLC for your leading practice and an S-Corp for a separate service line? That's two separate bookkeeping engagements in most providers' pricing models. Each entity needs its own books, reconciliation, and statements. Budget for 75-100% of your base package cost for each additional entity.
Project-level or client-level profitability tracking rarely appears in standard bookkeeping bundles. Most bookkeepers categorize expenses by type (software, contractors, travel). Tracking which expenses are tied to which client projects requires class or location tracking in QuickBooks, custom reporting, and significantly more categorization work. This feature alone can add $400-800/month because it's genuinely time-intensive.
Additional account reconciliations beyond the base limit accumulate fast. Your business checking, two credit cards, a PayPal account, a line of credit, and a savings account? That's six accounts. If your package includes two, you're paying overages for four. At $75-150 per additional account, that's $300-600 monthly, which you didn't budget for.
Receipt management and expense tracking are obvious bookkeeping tasks, yet many providers treat them as optional add-ons. They'll categorize transactions from your bank feed. Actually matching receipts, ensuring proper documentation for audits, and flagging missing receipts? That requires integration with receipt management software and additional review time, often at an extra $100-250/month.
What's never included in bookkeeping packages

These services appear to be related to bookkeeping but require entirely different expertise and separate engagements.
1. Tax preparation and filing is the big one. Consulting founders often assume their monthly bookkeeper will handle their tax returns. They won't. Tax prep is a separate service requiring CPA credentials, different software, and significantly more complex analysis. Budget $2,000-5,000 for annual business tax returns, depending on complexity. Some bookkeeping firms offer bundled pricing, but it's still a distinct line item.
2. Payroll processing runs on different systems, with different timelines and compliance requirements than bookkeeping. Yes, your bookkeeper will record payroll transactions in QuickBooks. Actually running payroll, calculating withholdings, and filing payroll taxes? That's Gusto, ADP, or a separate payroll module. Add $40-150/month, depending on employee count.
3. CFO advisory, forecasting, and strategic planning require a completely different skill set than transaction categorization. Your bookkeeper records what happened. A CFO analyzes what it means and what should happen next. If you want cash flow projections, scenario modeling, or strategic financial guidance, you're looking at fractional CFO services starting around $1,500-3,000/month, not bookkeeping packages.
4. Controller review and oversight bridge the gap between bookkeeping and CFO work. A controller reviews the bookkeeper's work for accuracy, ensures proper close procedures are followed, and provides technical accounting guidance. Some firms build this into higher-tier packages. Most don't. Controller oversight typically adds $500-1,200/month, depending on complexity.
5. Audit support and documentation management for due diligence rarely come standard. If you're raising capital, getting acquired, or facing an audit, you need organized documentation, audit-ready books, and someone who can respond to detailed inquiries. This is project-based work, not monthly bookkeeping, usually billed at $150-250/hour.
How to evaluate bookkeeping packages for your consulting firm
1. Start by listing what you actually need, not what the packages offer. Do you need project-level profitability? Multi-entity books? AR/AP management? Write down your requirements first, then see which packages match.
2. Ask providers explicitly about transaction limits and account limits. Get the overage fees in writing. Calculate your typical monthly volume and see if you'll hit those caps. A $900/month package that covers everything beats a $700/month package that hits you with $400 in monthly overages.
3. Clarify the statement delivery timeline and what "monthly close" means. When do you get your financials? What format? Can you get project reports or class-based P&Ls? Who reviews the books before delivery?
4. Understand the onboarding scope. Will they clean up your existing QuickBooks? Reconcile back to what date? Fix your chart of accounts? Onboarding quality matters tremendously and varies widely between providers.
5. Ask about included communication. Do you get a dedicated contact? Slack or email support? Response time commitments? How often do you review financials together? Support quality usually matters more than transaction volume.
Bookkeeping packages pricing makes sense once you decode what's standard versus premium.
For most consulting firms running $1–5M in revenue, realistic all-in bookkeeping costs typically land between $1,200–2,500 per month once you account for the services you actually need.
Packages advertised under $800 per month often look attractive upfront, but they usually require significant add-ons to handle real consulting-firm complexity.
The right package matches your operational reality, not the cheapest base price.
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