Property Management Accounting: The Complete Guide

By PropertyCEO Team · March 6, 2026

Property management accounting is the backbone of a well-run PM business — and one of the most common areas where property managers get into trouble. Between trust accounts, owner disbursements, security deposits, and your own operating finances, there are more moving pieces than most small businesses deal with. This complete guide covers everything from setting up your chart of accounts to choosing the right software, so you can keep your books clean and your business growing.

Why Property Management Accounting Is Different

Unlike a typical business where you track your own income and expenses, property managers handle other people's money. This creates unique challenges:

Setting Up Your Property Management Chart of Accounts

A well-organized chart of accounts is the foundation of accurate financial reporting. Here's a recommended structure for property management companies:

Asset Accounts (1000-1999)

Account #Account NamePurpose
1000Operating CheckingYour company's operating funds
1010Operating SavingsCompany reserves
1100Trust Account - RentsCollected rents before disbursement
1110Trust Account - Security DepositsTenant security deposits held
1200Accounts Receivable - TenantsOutstanding rent and charges
1300Accounts Receivable - OwnersOwner-owed amounts (reserve replenishment)

Liability Accounts (2000-2999)

Account #Account NamePurpose
2000Accounts PayableBills owed to vendors
2100Security Deposits HeldLiability for tenant deposits
2200Owner Funds HeldRents and reserves owed to owners
2300Prepaid RentRent received for future months

Income Accounts (4000-4999)

Account #Account NamePurpose
4000Management FeesMonthly percentage or flat fees
4010Leasing FeesTenant placement commissions
4020Lease Renewal FeesRenewal processing fees
4030Setup/Onboarding FeesNew property setup charges
4040Maintenance MarkupsMarkup on vendor invoices
4050Late Fee IncomeYour portion of late fees collected
4060Other Service FeesInspection fees, eviction management, etc.

Expense Accounts (5000-6999)

Standard business expenses: payroll, office rent, software subscriptions, marketing, insurance, vehicle expenses, professional development, and legal/accounting fees. For a complete list of deductible expenses, see our guide on property management tax deductions.

Trust Accounting: The Rules You Can't Break

Trust accounting is the single most regulated aspect of property management finance. Violations can result in license revocation, fines, and even criminal charges. Here's what you need to know.

What Goes Into Trust Accounts

What Never Touches Trust Accounts

Critical Trust Accounting Rules

  1. Never commingle: Trust funds and operating funds must be in separate bank accounts at all times
  2. Reconcile monthly: Bank statement balance must match your accounting records on the last day of every month
  3. Per-owner tracking: You must be able to produce a ledger showing exactly how much belongs to each owner at any time
  4. Timely disbursements: Pay owners on schedule (typically by the 15th of each month)
  5. Security deposit compliance: Follow your state's specific rules on deposit accounts, interest, and return timelines
  6. Audit-ready records: Keep records for at least 5 years (7 years is safer)
Warning: The #1 reason property managers lose their licenses is trust account violations — usually commingling funds or failing to reconcile. Set up a monthly reconciliation process and never skip it, even when you're busy.

Monthly Reconciliation Process

Bank reconciliation ensures your accounting records match your actual bank balances. Here's a step-by-step process:

Step 1: Gather Your Documents

Step 2: Reconcile the Trust Account

  1. Start with the bank statement ending balance
  2. Add deposits in transit (recorded in your books but not yet at the bank)
  3. Subtract outstanding checks (written but not yet cashed)
  4. The result should match your trust account ledger balance
  5. Run a "trust liability" report — total trust balance should equal the sum of all owner ledger balances plus all security deposits held

Step 3: Reconcile the Operating Account

Same process as above, but simpler since you're only tracking your company's income and expenses.

Step 4: Investigate Discrepancies

Common causes of discrepancies:

Step 5: Document and File

Print or save your reconciliation report, sign it, and file it. If you're ever audited, complete monthly reconciliation records are your best defense.

Owner Financial Reporting

Professional financial reporting is a competitive advantage. Here's what to provide:

Monthly Owner Statement

Every owner should receive a statement by the 15th of the following month that includes:

Annual Tax Package

By January 31st each year, provide:

This is one of the highest-value services you provide. Owners who get a clean tax package from you are far less likely to leave. For details on structuring your agreements around these services, check our property management agreement template guide.

Property Management Accounting Software

The right software eliminates hours of manual work and reduces errors. Here are the top options for 2026:

SoftwareBest ForStarting PriceTrust Accounting
BuildiumSmall to mid-size PMs (up to 500 units)$58/monthYes
AppFolioGrowing PMs (200+ units)$1.40/unit/monthYes
Rent ManagerLarge portfolios (500+ units)Custom pricingYes
PropertywareSingle-family portfolios$1/unit/monthYes
QuickBooks + StessaStartup PMs (under 50 units)$30/monthManual

For a comprehensive comparison including features, integrations, and user reviews, see our property management software comparison.

Pro Tip: Don't use generic accounting software (QuickBooks alone) once you pass 50 units. Property management-specific software handles trust accounting, per-property tracking, and owner reporting natively. The time savings pay for the software within the first month.

Common Property Management Accounting Mistakes

1. Commingling Funds

Even accidentally putting $50 of company money into the trust account is a violation. Set up separate bank accounts from day one and never cross them.

2. Late or Skipped Reconciliations

Monthly reconciliation isn't optional. Small errors compound quickly — a $200 discrepancy in January becomes a nightmare by December.

3. Not Tracking by Property

Every income and expense must be tagged to a specific property. "General maintenance" with no property assignment makes owner reporting impossible and tax preparation a headache.

4. Paying Owners Before Reconciling

Always reconcile before disbursing. If you overpay an owner due to an accounting error, recovering that money is awkward and time-consuming.

5. Manual Spreadsheets Past 20 Units

Spreadsheets don't have audit trails, don't prevent errors, and don't scale. Invest in proper software early. The transition only gets harder as you grow.

Scaling Your Accounting as You Grow

1-50 Units: Do It Yourself

Use property management software, reconcile monthly, and handle owner statements yourself. Budget 4-6 hours per month for bookkeeping.

50-200 Units: Part-Time Bookkeeper

Hire a bookkeeper familiar with property management trust accounting. Expect to pay $500-$1,500/month depending on your market. They handle day-to-day entries; you review reconciliations and approve disbursements.

200-500 Units: Full-Time Accounting Staff

You need a dedicated property accountant or controller. This person manages all trust accounting, owner reporting, vendor payments, and reconciliations. Salary range: $45,000-$70,000 depending on market.

500+ Units: Accounting Department

Multiple staff with clear separation of duties (the person who writes checks shouldn't be the person who reconciles). Consider a CFO or outsourced CFO for strategic financial management.

Final Thoughts

Property management accounting isn't glamorous, but it's the difference between a business that scales smoothly and one that implodes under audit pressure. Set up your chart of accounts correctly from the start, invest in proper software, reconcile religiously, and build systems that grow with you. Your owners trust you with their largest investment — honor that trust with impeccable financial management.

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