Exactly so. The first year, I thought I would do all the accounts myself... with zero formal accounting knowledge. After all, with just a few invoices and payments, how hard could it be? The answer was... it's an entire discipline I know nothing about, and while theoretically simple, you have zero practical experience or understanding of what the government requires of you, and there are lots of tax rules and accountancy terms you have to properly understand. So you waste days doing it, and worrying if you got anything wrong, because you are legally obligated to do it correctly and file everything on time. That's a lot of worry and time to save some money.
The second year, I just paid an accountant to do it for me. It was very expensive given that the accounts could be written in their entirety on a single sheet of paper. But I had the peace of mind that it was all done correctly by an expert, and they were responsible for ensuring it was all done by the book and filed properly. And they found a few mistakes I made in the previous year.
The accounts are essentially a fixed overhead; it doesn't get much more expensive if you do 10 or 100 times the business. But that makes starting out hard because it's a big annual fixed cost.
I do wish freelancing was easier, be it on closed or open projects. It does seem like governments have stifled entrepreneurship with overly burdensome taxation policies. I'm not opposed to paying income tax, but I do think it could be made sufficiently simple to pay for small freelance activities that it's not deterring it, and that would be beneficial for the economy overall. Many of these small jobs could be the catalyst for the formation of a new company if they take off.
The second year, I just paid an accountant to do it for me. It was very expensive given that the accounts could be written in their entirety on a single sheet of paper. But I had the peace of mind that it was all done correctly by an expert, and they were responsible for ensuring it was all done by the book and filed properly. And they found a few mistakes I made in the previous year.
The accounts are essentially a fixed overhead; it doesn't get much more expensive if you do 10 or 100 times the business. But that makes starting out hard because it's a big annual fixed cost.
I do wish freelancing was easier, be it on closed or open projects. It does seem like governments have stifled entrepreneurship with overly burdensome taxation policies. I'm not opposed to paying income tax, but I do think it could be made sufficiently simple to pay for small freelance activities that it's not deterring it, and that would be beneficial for the economy overall. Many of these small jobs could be the catalyst for the formation of a new company if they take off.