Home About Shannon Services Blog Contact Book Now

(And Why That's a Good Thing)

You open your banking app, see the number staring back at you, and think… "Wait. If I made a profit this month, why doesn't my bank account show it?"

You're not alone. This is one of the most common points of confusion for entrepreneurs — and one of the first things we clarify for new clients at Salt & Sand Bookkeeping.

Bank Balance vs. Profit: Two Very Different Stories

Your bank balance tells you how much cash you have right now. Your profit tells you how your business performed over a period of time. They measure completely different things — which is why they rarely match.

Your Bank Balance: A Snapshot of Cash

Your bank balance reflects money that has actually hit your account, payments that have cleared, bank fees, and transfers. It does not reflect invoices you're still waiting to be paid, bills you've incurred but haven't paid yet, or pending transactions. It's a real-time cash picture — nothing more, nothing less.

Your Profit: A Snapshot of Performance

Your Profit & Loss statement shows income you earned (even if you haven't been paid yet) and expenses you incurred (even if you haven't paid them yet). Profit is about performance, not cash. You can be profitable on paper while your bank account feels tight — or vice versa.

Why They Don't Match

1. Timing Differences

This is the biggest culprit. You recorded revenue, but the client hasn't paid yet. You recorded an expense, but the cash hasn't left the bank yet. Your books and your bank move on different timelines.

2. Outstanding Invoices

Your P&L says you earned the money. Your bank says, "Not yet." Service-based businesses feel this the most.

3. Large or Irregular Expenses

Annual software renewals, contractor invoices, equipment purchases — these can drain cash quickly, even if your business is profitable overall.

4. Owner Draws & Loan Payments

This is the one most business owners miss. Owner draws, credit card payments, and loan principal payments reduce your bank balance, but they do not show up as expenses on your P&L. So your profit stays the same while your cash drops.

The Bottom Line

Profit measures performance. Your bank balance measures liquidity. They're supposed to be different — and understanding that difference is one of the most empowering steps you can take as a business owner.

At Salt & Sand Bookkeeping, we help you read both numbers clearly so you can make confident, informed decisions without the confusion.

Have questions about your books? Let's talk.

Schedule a Free Consultation
← Back to all posts