Why You Need More Than Year-End Figures
Because In Health & Social Care, Visibility Equals Stability
Most care directors receive a set of accounts once a year.
They show:
- Turnover
- Costs
- Profit
- Corporation Tax
By the time those figures arrive, the year is over.
You can’t change it.
You can’t influence it.
You can only accept it.
In Health & Social Care — where staffing costs dominate, margins are tight, and payments can be delayed — that isn’t enough.
Year-end accounts tell you what happened.
Management accounts tell you what’s happening.
And more importantly — what’s about to happen.
What Are Management Accounts?
Management accounts are regular financial reports — usually monthly or quarterly — that give directors real-time insight into:
✔ Profitability
✔ Cashflow
✔ Wage ratios
✔ Tax exposure
✔ Director drawings
✔ Contract performance
They are internal tools for decision-making.
They are not just compliance documents for HMRC.
Why Year-End Figures Are Too Late in Care
Health & Social Care businesses operate in a high-pressure environment:
- Weekly payroll
- Pension contributions
- Agency staffing costs
- Local authority payment cycles
- Rising National Living Wage
- Regulatory compliance
If your numbers are reviewed once a year, you may not spot problems until:
- Cash runs tight
- Tax becomes due
- Dividends aren’t available
- Wage costs have eroded margin
By then, options are limited.
The Wage Ratio Problem
In care companies, staffing typically represents 70–85% of turnover.
A 3–5% increase in wage ratio can wipe out net profit.
Without management accounts, directors may not notice:
- Overtime creep
- Agency overspend
- Inefficient rota patterns
- Contract underpricing
The business can feel busy and stable — while margin quietly disappears.
Management accounts highlight this early.
Cashflow vs Profit — The Critical Difference
One of the most common issues in care companies is:
“Profitable on paper but no cash in the bank.”
Management accounts help you see:
- What you are owed
- What you owe
- Upcoming tax
- Payroll timing
- Dividend capacity
Without that visibility, director withdrawals can accidentally create:
- Director’s Loan issues
- Tax pressure
- Section 455 risk
Cashflow forecasting should sit alongside profit reporting.
What Good Management Accounts Should Include
For Health & Social Care companies, management accounts should show:
✔ 1️⃣ Profit & Loss Statement
With comparison to previous periods.
✔ 2️⃣ Wage Percentage of Turnover
Clearly visible and tracked monthly.
✔ 3️⃣ Gross Margin by Service Type
Residential vs domiciliary vs supported living.
✔ 4️⃣ Cashflow Forecast
At least 3 months ahead.
✔ 5️⃣ Corporation Tax Estimate
Not a surprise at year end.
✔ 6️⃣ Director’s Loan Position
Reviewed regularly.
✔ 7️⃣ Balance Sheet Review
To monitor reserves and liabilities.
If you’re only receiving a basic profit figure, that’s not full visibility.
Growth Without Visibility Is Risky
Care businesses often grow by:
- Taking on new service users
- Expanding into new contracts
- Recruiting additional staff
Growth feels positive.
But growth increases:
- Payroll
- Training costs
- Pension contributions
- Cashflow pressure
Without management accounts, directors may grow turnover while shrinking profit.
Visibility protects sustainable expansion.
The Regulatory Angle
In regulated sectors like care, financial resilience matters.
Management accounts demonstrate:
✔ Oversight
✔ Control
✔ Governance
✔ Sustainability
If questioned about financial stability, directors who review monthly figures can respond confidently.
Directors relying on year-end accounts often cannot.
The Director Pay Link
Management accounts directly support proper director remuneration.
They help confirm:
- Available distributable profits
- Dividend safety
- Tax exposure
- DLA balance
Without regular review, directors risk taking income based on assumption rather than confirmed data.
“We’re Too Busy for Monthly Reviews”
This is understandable.
Care directors already manage:
- Safeguarding
- Staffing
- Compliance
- Emotional responsibility
But the reality is:
If you don’t schedule time to review your numbers, you’ll be forced to react when problems arise.
Management accounts are not an administrative burden.
They are a stress reduction tool.
The Difference Between Reactive and Proactive
Reactive care company:
- Reviews numbers annually
- Adjusts dividends after year end
- Discovers tax late
- Spots wage creep too late
Proactive care company:
- Reviews numbers quarterly or monthly
- Plans tax in advance
- Monitors wage ratios
- Forecasts cashflow
- Aligns director pay with profit
One feels constant financial pressure.
The other operates with clarity.
The Real Benefit: Confidence
Management accounts don’t just improve compliance.
They improve confidence.
Confidence to:
- Expand safely
- Recruit strategically
- Increase director pay responsibly
- Invest in improvements
- Sleep better at night
In a sector as demanding as care, that matters.
What a Proactive Accountant Should Be Doing
A good accountant for a care company should:
✔ Prepare regular management accounts
✔ Explain the figures clearly
✔ Highlight risks early
✔ Forecast tax before year end
✔ Review wage percentage trends
✔ Monitor Director’s Loan Accounts
If your accountant only appears once a year — you’re missing financial leadership.
Final Thoughts
Health & Social Care directors carry enormous responsibility.
Your financial systems should match that level of responsibility.
Year-end accounts are necessary.
But they are historical.
Management accounts are protective.
They allow you to steer — not just report.
Want Better Financial Visibility?
If you run a Health & Social Care Limited Company and would like:
✔ Monthly or quarterly management accounts
✔ A wage ratio review
✔ A cashflow forecast
✔ A tax projection
✔ A Director’s Loan assessment
We can help.
Because in care…
Visibility prevents crisis.
Accounting Does MATTER.
Making Accounting Tools & Techniques Empower Reliable Success.