SortMe Money
The most expensive thing about being self-employed in New Zealand isn't tax. It's the deductible business expense that came off your personal credit card in November and never made it to the accountant in March. A self-employed Kiwi on the 33% marginal rate who misses $4,000 of legitimate business deductions a year is overpaying IRD by roughly $1,320 — every year. Across five years that's $6,600 of someone else's money sitting permanently in Wellington. In this episode, SortMe Resident Money Writer Hugo Jonston unpicks the unsolved part of the self-employed financial stack in 2026. Hnry takes 1% plus GST and pays you a take-home number. Solo flags real-time tax owed. Your accountant pulls it together in March. What none of them do is track the business spending that's already left your personal accounts — the Officeworks run on the personal Visa, the Adobe subscription still charging the card you signed up with in 2018, the Uber to the client meeting, the home-office portion of the power bill, the half-yearly domain rego that auto-charges in May without anyone noticing. "If the cashflow between personal and entity goes one direction (business income into your personal account), the tax tools handle it. If it goes the other direction (personal money spent on business), there's no tool watching." In this episode: * The real cost of self-employment in NZ — not the tax bill, but the deductions silently lost on the personal card every month, compounding to mid-five figures over a working career * Why the "two clean sets of accounts" story doesn't survive contact with real life — erratic business income, the laptop charger on a personal Mastercard, the sweep from business to personal to cover the mortgage * What a self-employed budgeting tool actually has to do in 2026 — hold personal and entity accounts in one app but logically separate, with the same login and dashboard * The mechanic that closes the gap — tagging a personal-card transaction to the entity in real time, attaching the receipt and a note, so the transaction lives in both places (personal cashflow stays accurate, deduction doesn't get lost) * Why receipt capture has to be five-second friction or nobody does it — mobile photo at the counter, email forward to a capture inbox, amount and vendor auto-extracted * The hero feature that retroactively justifies the subscription — a one-button March zip of categorised CSV, receipts, invoices and a cover summary the accountant can read in two minutes * The three-tool stack that actually works in 2026 — Hnry or Solo for tax, your accountant for the annual return, and SortMe Pro for everything in between * The dollar maths — roughly $1,320/year in recovered deductions at the 33% rate, plus the average $2,371.27/year SortMe finds in forgotten subscriptions, on a $399/year Pro subscription * The 30-minute setup — Akahu connection for ANZ, ASB, BNZ, Westpac, Kiwibank, Co-op, Heartland and SBS, plus KiwiSaver, Sharesies, Hatch and Kernel; create the entity workspace; spend a Sunday backfilling three months; tag as you go from there Read the full article: sortme.com/post/budgeting-app-self-employed-nz
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