Cleanup & Catch-Up Bookkeeping Pricing (2026 Benchmark)

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Cleanup & Catch-Up Bookkeeping Pricing (2026 Benchmark)

Bookkeeping Industry Benchmarks

Cleanup is the highest-dollar work a bookkeeper does and the one with no published standard. Here is what it actually costs by months behind and by volume, and how to scope a quote so you do not lose money on it.

Updated: 2026 Scope: U.S. single-entity Basis: Project / fixed-fee

Catch-up and cleanup are not “monthly bookkeeping, but late.” They are a repair job. You are paying for investigation, reconstruction, and documentation: chasing missing statements, fixing miscategorized transactions, untangling duplicate entries, and getting balances to actually tie out. That is why it prices on its own scale, separate from a monthly fee, and why so many bookkeepers underquote it.

Two inputs drive almost every cleanup quote: how many months the client is behind, and how many transactions a month they run. The tables below give the going rate for both.

2–4x A month of cleanup costs two to four times a month of ongoing bookkeeping for the same client. Catch-up is a repair job, not late monthly work, which is why it prices on its own scale: from $300 a few months behind to $8,000+ for over a year.

Cleanup cost by months behind

Typical fixed-fee catch-up cost by backlog length, single-entity business at roughly 50–150 transactions per month. S-corps, partnerships, and businesses with payroll run 30–50% higher.
How far behind Typical cost What’s involved
1–3 months$300–$500Recent backlog, statements usually available
4–6 months$500–$1,500Partial-year rebuild, some missing records
7–12 months$1,500–$3,500Full-year reconstruction, multiple gaps
Over 12 months$3,500–$8,000+Multi-year, prior-period corrections, high uncertainty

Cleanup cost per month behind, by complexity

A second way firms quote: a per-month rate multiplied by the backlog. It is useful when volume is steady across the period.

Per-month-behind cleanup cost by complexity level. Multiply by the number of months in the backlog.
Complexity Cost per month behind Typical profile
Low$150–$300One or two accounts, service business, clean source docs
Medium$300–$600Several accounts, some payroll, a few payment platforms
High$600–$1,200+Inventory, multiple platforms, payroll issues, mixed personal/business

Note the overlap with the months-behind table: a high-complexity client six months behind at $600 to $1,200 per month is a $3,600 to $7,200 project, far above the $500 to $1,500 a simple 4-to-6-month client pays. Complexity, not just backlog length, is what you are pricing. Scope it before you quote.

What drives a cleanup quote

Months behind. The most visible input, but not the most important. It sets the floor.

Transaction volume per month. A sole proprietor at 50 transactions a month cleans up far faster than an ecommerce business at 500-plus. The standard ranges assume 50 to 150; above that, scale up.

Number of accounts. Every bank account, credit card, and processor is a separate reconciliation for every month in the backlog. Four accounts over twelve months is forty-eight reconciliations.

Cleanup decisions. This is the hidden cost. Chasing missing statements, resolving uncategorized activity, and fixing misposts is where the hours disappear. Mixed personal and business charges on a card reliably blow up a timeline.

How to price cleanup without losing money: never quote cleanup off months-behind alone. Get read-only access first, count the accounts and the monthly volume, and check whether personal and business funds are mixed. Quote a fixed fee with a scope cap, or quote hourly when the books are genuinely unknown. Cleanup is also your strongest lead-in to a monthly engagement, so price it to win the relationship, not just the project.

Frequently asked questions

How much does catch-up bookkeeping cost?
For a single-entity business at typical volume, expect roughly $300 to $500 for 1 to 3 months behind, $500 to $1,500 for 4 to 6 months, $1,500 to $3,500 for 7 to 12 months, and $3,500 to $8,000 or more for over a year.
What is the difference between catch-up and cleanup?
Catch-up means transactions were never recorded and you are entering them. Cleanup means the books exist but contain errors to fix. Most real projects involve both at once, which is why they price together.
Why is cleanup more expensive per month than ongoing bookkeeping?
Ongoing bookkeeping works with current, organized data. Cleanup is reconstruction: finding missing records, correcting prior entries, and resolving uncertainty. It carries more hours and more risk per month than keeping current books current.
Should cleanup be a flat fee or hourly?
Flat fee when the scope is clear after a review. Hourly with a cap when the books are messy enough that the scope is genuinely unknown going in.
    Sources & methodology
  • Cost by months behind: SDO CPA, How Much Does Catch-Up Bookkeeping Cost?, Apr 2026 (ranges assume 50–150 transactions/month, single entity; S-corps and payroll run 30–50% higher).
  • Per-month-behind by complexity: Etisson, Catch-Up Bookkeeping Pricing, 2026.
  • Cleanup project ranges: Monaco CPA, Bookkeeping Cleanup Cost, Apr 2026 ($750–$3,500 typical).
  • Complexity drivers (accounts, mixed personal/business, inventory): RemoteBooksOnline, 2025.
  • Note on figures: cleanup pricing has no single industry standard; these are the most consistent ranges across published CPA-firm pricing. Always scope from access before quoting.

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