Your finances, finally organized
A practical course for freelancers and self-employed workers who want to understand their own numbers. Learn to separate accounts, set aside taxes, and track what comes in and goes out.
General informational content. Does not replace the advice of a certified public accountant.
What this course covers
Four core areas that independent workers often find confusing. Each one builds on the previous, creating a complete picture of your financial life.
Separating Personal and Business Accounts
Understanding why mixing funds creates confusion and what practical steps you can take to keep your professional income distinct from household expenses.
Building a Tax Reserve
Exploring methods for setting aside a portion of each payment received so that tax obligations don't arrive as a surprise at the end of the period.
Tracking Income and Expenses
Simple, consistent record-keeping approaches that don't require accounting software. Understand what you earn, what you spend, and where the gaps appear.
Criteria for Changing Tax Category
Recognizing the signals that suggest it may be time to reconsider your registration status, and understanding what factors are typically involved in that decision.
Practical before theoretical
This course is built around real situations that freelancers face. Not abstract concepts, but concrete scenarios with practical guidance.
The mixed account trap
When personal and business money flow through the same account, it becomes nearly impossible to know how your work is actually performing. Rent, groceries, client payments, and subscriptions all blur together.
This module examines why separation matters, what it looks like in practice, and how to begin without disrupting your current routine.
- Identifying which transactions belong where
- Setting up a simple dual-account structure
- Paying yourself a consistent "salary" from business income
- Recognizing when the boundary blurs and correcting it
Taxes shouldn't be a surprise
Many self-employed workers experience a familiar moment of dread when fiscal obligations come due. The money that arrived in the account already left through expenses and lifestyle spending.
This part of the course explores how to build a reserve habit into your regular workflow, so obligations are already covered when they arrive.
- Understanding the timing of tax obligations
- Calculating a reasonable reserve percentage
- Keeping the reserve separate and untouched
Knowing your actual numbers
Tracking doesn't require complicated software or hours of data entry. What it requires is consistency. This module introduces simple, sustainable recording methods that fit into any work style.
By the end, you'll have a clear picture of cash flow patterns, high-expense periods, and the months where income tends to be lower.
- Choosing a tracking method that you'll actually use
- Categorizing income and expenses simply
- Monthly review habits that take under 30 minutes
- Reading your own data to make better decisions
When to consider changing category
One of the most common questions for self-employed workers. Knowing what to look for makes the decision less stressful and more informed.
Revenue signals
Understanding which revenue thresholds are relevant to your registration type and how to monitor them over time without constant anxiety.
Weighing the factors
Revenue is one factor among several. This module helps you understand what other elements are typically considered when evaluating a change in tax status.
When to consult a professional
This course provides general orientation. We clearly identify the points where consulting a certified public accountant becomes important for your specific situation.
The information in this course is general and educational in nature. It does not constitute tax or legal advice. Always consult a qualified professional for your specific circumstances.
Designed for independent workers
This course was developed with a specific person in mind. Someone who decided to work for themselves, handles their own invoicing, and finds the financial side of independence more stressful than the work itself.
Whether you've been freelancing for six months or six years, the fundamentals of economic organization tend to remain the same. What changes is how much clarity you have about them.
Ready to understand your numbers?
Get in touch to learn more about the course format, availability for groups and organizations, and how the content is structured.