Avoiding Expensive Cloud Accounting Surprises
Cloud accounting should make life easier, not create nasty surprises just before tax deadlines. Yet many London small businesses only spot problems when year-end accounts are due, Self Assessment is looming, or a lender asks for clear numbers and the system cannot deliver.
Around late spring and early summer, there is often a rush to get books ready after the 5 April tax year end and ahead of July tax payments. This is when gaps show up: missing bank transactions, wrong VAT codes, messy payroll and reports that do not match reality. At that point, fixes can be stressful and time-consuming.
Cloud accounting is now standard, especially with Making Tax Digital, hybrid working and teams spread across the city or even overseas. But the setup and daily use are where many issues start. As London ICAEW chartered accountants, we see the same patterns again and again, particularly with female founders and sector-based businesses like creative studios, professional services and hospitality.
In this article, we walk through common cloud accounting pitfalls, how to spot them early and where expert help can save you time, tax trouble and missed opportunities.
Choosing the Wrong Cloud Accounting System
One of the biggest problems is picking software that simply does not suit how the business works.
Common signs of a poor system fit include:
- You have to keep separate spreadsheets to track real performance
- Simple tasks take several steps or workarounds
- You dread quarter-end and year-end because the data never looks right
The one-size-fits-all myth can be costly in London, where businesses often have:
- Multiple income streams, such as consultancy, digital products and ad hoc projects
- International clients, different currencies and cross-border sales
- VAT quirks from mixed supplies or special schemes
Service-led firms need strong time, project and WIP tracking. Product-based or hospitality businesses need clear inventory, point-of-sale and tip or service charge handling. A solo consultant has different needs from a growing group with several entities and shared costs.
Another common issue is ignoring integrations and workflows. If your accounting tool does not link cleanly with:
- Point-of-sale or card terminals
- E-commerce platforms and online marketplaces
- Payment platforms and expense tools
- Project management or time tracking
You end up with manual exports, imports and re-keying. This leads to duplicated entries, missed invoices and last-minute scrambles at VAT and year-end.
Female entrepreneurs and sector-focused businesses often also need:
- Clear investor or board updates
- Grant or project reporting
- Cash runway and scenario planning
Basic packages can struggle with these without careful setup. It pays to review needs with an adviser before committing, especially if you expect remote teams, rapid scaling or overseas expansion.
Bank Feeds and Automation That Quietly Go Wrong
Bank feeds feel magical when they work, but they are not perfect. Many London businesses assume every transaction is pulled across cleanly, then find gaps months later.
Bank feeds can drop items when:
- The bank changes its connection rules
- A card or account is replaced
- The feed quietly expires and no one reconnects it
- There are system outages at peak trading times
If you rely on feeds during busy seasons, such as a hospitality spike, missing a week or two of data can distort your numbers for the rest of the year.
Automation rules are another frequent trap. Rules that auto-code transactions save time, but if they are set up badly, they can:
- Mix personal and business costs on a director card
- Treat director loans as income or expenses
- Mispost recurring subscriptions to the wrong cost centres
- Put everything into generic codes that tell you nothing
These errors compound over a tax year. The result can be wrong VAT returns, misstated profit and poor decisions about hiring, marketing or investment.
A common pattern is the “set and forget” approach, where no one reconciles the bank until the year is almost over. By then, fixing issues is slow, and you may already have sent incorrect figures to HMRC.
A simple rhythm helps:
- Do bank reconciliations at least monthly
- Carry out a deeper look around each VAT quarter
- Plan a review ahead of key payment dates, such as late July and late January
VAT, Payroll and HMRC Compliance in the Cloud
Cloud systems make VAT returns and payroll filings feel easy, which can hide serious issues when settings are wrong.
VAT problems often start with:
- Default VAT codes that do not match the way you trade
- International sales being treated like UK sales
- Mixed-exempt activities, for example, some financial or professional services, are not set correctly
Digital services, cross-border supplies and different VAT schemes all need care. If the logic in the system is wrong, every invoice and bill can be mis-coded, leading to under- or overpaid VAT and later HMRC questions.
Payroll modules can also look neat while hiding errors, especially for owner-managed companies. Common issues include:
- Treating director drawings as normal expenses, not salary or dividends
- Paying dividends from the wrong reserves
- Missing benefits in kind, such as company cars or health cover
- Wrong tax codes, student loans or pension settings for staff
Using cloud accounting does not mean HMRC compliance is automatic. Making Tax Digital still expects accurate underlying data and correct configuration.
It is wise to build in regular compliance reviews, particularly:
- Before major HMRC dates
- When new staff join or pay packages change
- Around the start of each new tax year, when rules are updated
Poor Use of Cloud Data for Planning and Funding
Many founders treat cloud accounting like a digital shoebox. They log in for VAT returns or year-end, then ignore the system. This wastes one of the biggest benefits of cloud tools, which is real-time insight.
Good data should help you:
- See cash flow pressure before it becomes a crisis
- Test prices, staffing and supplier changes
- Track which clients, projects or menu items are truly profitable
The gaps become clear when you need funding, a new lease or a personal mortgage. Lenders and investors often ask for:
- Up-to-date management accounts
- Cash flow forecasts
- Clear separation of business and personal spending
Default reports can give a false sense of comfort. If items are miscategorised, or if you have no project, location or department tracking, the headline profit number may not mean much.
Typical weaknesses we see include:
- No clear split between director’s personal costs and business expenses
- No tracking of profitability by client, project or site
- No simple cash runway view for startups or seasonal businesses
An adviser can help turn raw cloud data into sector-aware insight, like:
- Utilisation and recovery rates for consultants and agencies
- Table or room turnover for hospitality
- Recurring revenue and churn metrics for subscription or SaaS businesses
This can be especially helpful for female entrepreneurs who are often balancing business growth, external investment discussions and personal financial planning at the same time.
Setting up Cloud Accounting That Works for You
The good news is that most cloud accounting problems can be reduced with a clear structure and regular reviews.
A mid-year check, around early summer, is a great time to:
- Confirm your system is still the right fit
- Review bank feeds and automation rules
- Test VAT, payroll and dividend settings with an adviser
- Clean up old codes and unused features
- Refresh user access, approvals and document storage
You do not need to wait for a crisis. Some moments when expert input is especially helpful are when:
- The business is growing quickly, or opening a new site
- You are planning a funding round or approaching investors
- You are taking on your first employees or contractors
- You inherit a messy cloud file from a previous bookkeeper or accountant
As London-based ICAEW chartered accountants, we at MatPlus work with tax, accounting, estate planning and advisory in one joined-up view. That means we can help align your cloud accounting not only with HMRC rules, but also with your wider plans, whether you run a creative studio, a professional practice, a hospitality venue or a growing consultancy led by a female founder.
Good cloud accounting is not about ticking a box for Making Tax Digital. It is about having clear, reliable numbers that support day-to-day choices, reduce stress at busy deadlines and give you confidence when talking to HMRC, banks and investors.
Streamline Your Finances With Smart Cloud Accounting Today
If you are ready to simplify your bookkeeping and get real-time visibility over your numbers, our cloud accounting service gives you a clear, efficient way to stay in control. At MatPlus, we work with you to tailor the setup, workflows and reporting to how your business actually operates. Let us handle the technology and integrations so you can focus on running and growing your business. To discuss what would work best for you, simply contact us and we will talk you through your options.