Finance

Property Management Bookkeeping: The Complete Guide

March 6, 2026 · 16 min read · By PropertyCEO

Property management bookkeeping isn't like normal small business accounting. You're managing money that belongs to other people — security deposits, rent payments, maintenance reserves. One mistake with trust accounting can cost you your license, your reputation, and your business.

This guide covers everything from setting up your chart of accounts to passing a trust account audit. Whether you're managing 20 doors or scaling to 500, getting your books right is non-negotiable.

Table of Contents

  1. Trust Accounting: The Non-Negotiable
  2. Setting Up Your Chart of Accounts
  3. Daily Bookkeeping Tasks
  4. Monthly Close Process
  5. Owner Statements That Build Trust
  6. Tax Preparation and 1099s
  7. Best Bookkeeping Software for PMs
  8. Common Bookkeeping Mistakes to Avoid
  9. Scaling Your Financial Operations

Trust Accounting: The Non-Negotiable

Trust accounting is the single most important concept in property management finance. Here's the rule: owner money and your company money must never, ever commingle.

You need at minimum two bank accounts:

  1. Trust/escrow account: Where all rent payments, security deposits, and owner funds are held. This is NOT your money — it belongs to your owners and tenants.
  2. Operating account: Where your management fees and company income go. This IS your money.

Many states also require a separate security deposit trust account, keeping deposits isolated from operating rent funds. Check your state's requirements — violations can result in fines, license revocation, or criminal charges.

The cardinal sin of property management: using trust account funds to cover operating expenses. Even if you intend to "pay it back," this is commingling and it's illegal in every state. If your operating account is short, get a line of credit. Never touch trust funds.

Trust Account Rules

Setting Up Your Chart of Accounts

A well-structured chart of accounts makes everything else easier — reporting, tax prep, owner statements, and audits. Here's a PM-specific setup:

Trust Account Categories

CategoryExamples
Income (per property)Rent collected, late fees, pet rent, parking fees, application fees
Expenses (per property)Maintenance, utilities, HOA dues, insurance, property taxes
Security depositsDeposit held, deposit refunds, deposit forfeitures
Owner distributionsMonthly owner payments, reserves withheld
Management feesMonthly management fee, leasing fee, renewal fee

Operating Account Categories

CategoryExamples
RevenueManagement fees earned, leasing fees, late fee income (if retained)
PayrollSalaries, benefits, payroll taxes
MarketingAdvertising, website, SEO, listing fees
OfficeRent, utilities, supplies, insurance
SoftwarePM software, CRM, accounting software
Professional servicesLegal, CPA, licensing

Daily Bookkeeping Tasks

If you're using PM software like AppFolio or Buildium, much of this is automated through online rent payments and integrated accounting. But someone still needs to review and catch errors daily.

Monthly Close Process

Your monthly close should follow a consistent checklist. Here's the process:

  1. Day 1-3: Final posting of all income and expenses for the prior month
  2. Day 3-5: Bank reconciliation — match every transaction in your books to the bank statement
  3. Day 5-7: Trust account reconciliation — verify that trust balance = sum of all owner/tenant ledgers
  4. Day 7-10: Generate owner statements and distribute
  5. Day 10: Process owner distributions (ACH payments to owners)
  6. Day 10-15: Review operating P&L, compare to budget, flag variances

Your trust account reconciliation is the most critical monthly task. If the bank balance doesn't match the sum of all owner and tenant ledger balances, you have a problem. Find and fix discrepancies immediately — they only get harder to resolve over time.

Owner Statements That Build Trust

Owner statements aren't just accounting documents — they're your monthly opportunity to demonstrate value and build the owner relationship.

What to Include

Tax Preparation and 1099s

Property managers have specific tax obligations that general accountants often miss:

1099 Requirements

Tax-Smart Practices

Best Bookkeeping Software for PMs

SoftwareBest ForPrice Range
AppFolio100+ doors, full-service PM$1.40-1.90/unit/month
Buildium50-500 doors, trust accounting built in$55-375/month
Rent Manager500+ doors, enterprise featuresCustom pricing
PropertywareSingle-family focus, 250+ doorsCustom pricing
QuickBooks + PM softwareSmall PMs wanting QB integration$30-200/month combined

The key principle: use PM-specific software, not generic accounting software. QuickBooks alone doesn't handle trust accounting, per-property tracking, or owner statements well. Use a purpose-built PM platform, and integrate with QuickBooks if your CPA prefers it.

For more on choosing the right tools, see our guide to the best CRM and software for property management.

Common Bookkeeping Mistakes to Avoid

Scaling Your Financial Operations

As your portfolio grows, your bookkeeping processes must evolve:

When hiring your first team member, a bookkeeper is often more valuable than a leasing agent. Clean books = happy owners = retention = growth.

Understanding your bookkeeping also directly impacts your profit margins — you can't optimize what you can't see in your financials.

Get Bookkeeping Templates & Chart of Accounts

PropertyCEO includes PM-specific chart of accounts templates, monthly close checklists, trust reconciliation worksheets, and owner statement templates.

Get the complete playbook with 50+ templates → (30-day guarantee)

Master the Business Side of Property Management

Join the PropertyCEO waitlist for the complete financial operations playbook.

Get the Playbook — $197 →