For roofing businesses, tax season isn’t something that starts in April.
It starts long before December 31.
Waiting until your CPA asks for documents is the fastest way to overpay taxes and miss critical issues in your business.
Close Out Jobs — Don’t Carry Guesses Into the New Year
Every completed roofing job should be closed in your books before year-end.
That means:
-
Final labor allocated
-
Materials fully accounted for
-
Change orders included correctly
-
Revenue matched to actual job completion
Open jobs distort profit and lead to inaccurate tax reporting.
Reconcile Labor and Subcontractor Costs
Labor errors compound quickly in roofing.
Before year-end:
-
Verify payroll is assigned to the correct jobs
-
Confirm subcontractor costs are job-costed, not dumped into expenses
-
Review crew overruns that impact margins
This directly affects both profit reporting and tax liability.
Review Owner Draws and Expenses
Owner activity is one of the most common red flags during tax prep.
Make sure:
-
Personal expenses are not buried in operating costs
-
Owner draws are clearly labeled
-
Loan payments and reimbursements are classified correctly
This prevents unnecessary scrutiny and misreported income.
Understand Cash vs Profit Before Taxes Are Calculated
A strong cash balance does not mean high profit — and low cash does not mean a bad year.
Before taxes are estimated, you need clarity on:
-
True job profitability
-
Retainage still outstanding
-
Work-in-progress adjustments
-
Upcoming obligations in the new year
Without this, tax planning becomes guesswork.
Year-end bookkeeping is not about making things look good.
It’s about making them accurate before it’s too late to fix them.
Do you need some help with a quick cleanup of your books for your roofing business? Schedule your Discovery Call today here.