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QB Specialist

Resources · Checklists

QuickBooks checklists you can work or hand off

These checklists turn a senior specialist's process into a list you can work through yourself. The complete QuickBooks cleanup checklist is live now — every reconcile-and-correct step, grouped by phase, with your progress saved in your browser. More checklists for close, reconciliation, and year-end are on the way.

Last reviewed July 2026

A checklist is the working middle of a fix: it sits between knowing something is wrong and the moment the books are right. Each one here is drawn from the same method we run on a paid engagement, so nothing is lost if you decide to hand the file over partway through.

Where a checklist fits

Where a checklist fits in a QuickBooks fix A checklist is the working middle step: you spot a problem in a health check, work the checklist one item at a time, and it ends one of two honest ways — you finish the file yourself and the books close, or you hand it off for a free review. The same list serves both endings. YOU WORK THIS LIST — ONE STEP AT A TIME Health check something's off The checklist tick every step You finish it the books close You hand it off a free review takes over START WHEN A CHECK FAILS TWO HONEST ENDINGS
A checklist turns a diagnosis into ordered steps, then forks to two honest endings: finish the file yourself, or hand it off with nothing lost. Illustrative workflow, not a measured statistic.

The checklists available now

One checklist is fully published today, and it is the one most people arrive needing. We link only what is live — a checklist appears on this page the day it ships, never before, so you never click through to an empty promise.

The QuickBooks cleanup checklist is the complete one: every check a senior specialist runs on a messy file, grouped into four phases — set the starting point, reconcile, correct, then review and close. You tick items as you go and your progress saves in your browser, so you can stop and pick it back up. It is the same list we work from on a paid cleanup, which is why you can start it yourself and hand it over at any point without losing your place.

More checklists are being written and will land here as they are finished: a month-end close checklist, a bank reconciliation checklist, a year-end closing checklist, a QuickBooks setup checklist, a catch-up bookkeeping checklist, and a Desktop-to-Online switch checklist. None of those are published yet, so none are linked — when each is ready to a real standard, it will appear in this list. This page is the home of the wider Resources library's checklist section; the guides and reference docs live alongside it.

How to work through a checklist

Work a list top to bottom and resist the urge to jump to the part that looks worst. The phases are ordered on purpose — you set a clean starting point, reconcile every account to its statement, correct what the reconciliation surfaces, then review the finished statements and lock the period. Reconciling before you recategorize keeps you from stacking fixes on top of balances that were never right, which is the single most common way a DIY cleanup goes sideways.

Tick items as you finish them. On the interactive lists your ticks are stored in your browser on this device, so a checklist is something you return to over several sittings rather than a single marathon. Nothing you do on the page is sent anywhere unless you choose to ask for a review, and every list is print-friendly if you would rather work it away from the screen. Not sure which list you need? The bookkeeping health score reads your file in a few minutes and points you at the right one.

When a checklist isn't enough

A checklist is honest about its own limits. It tells you what to do; it cannot do the trickier steps for you — tracing Opening Balance Equity out, clearing a stuck Undeposited Funds balance, or a file that simply refuses to reconcile. Those are the items where most people stall, and stalling is a signal, not a failure. The point of a list drawn from a real method is that you can stop working it and hand the file to a specialist without a single step going to waste.

That handoff runs on the same discipline the lists describe. Our methodology is verification over assertion — we look before we quote, quote a fixed scope before we work, map every change before we make it, and re-run your reports after. If a checklist has shown you the shape of the job and you would rather it were done and checked, a free read-only QuickBooks review tells you exactly what your file needs and what it would cost, at no charge and with no obligation.

Questions about the checklists

What checklists are available right now?

One complete checklist is published today: the QuickBooks cleanup checklist, which walks every reconcile-and-correct step grouped by phase. More — month-end close, reconciliation, year-end, setup — are being written and will appear here as they ship, not before.

Are these checklists free to use?

Yes. Every checklist is free to read, work through, and print. Nothing is gated and nothing is sent to us. If a list stalls you, a free read-only review is the natural next step, but it is never required to use the list.

Do I work a checklist myself or do you do it?

Either. The lists are written so you can run them yourself, step by step. They are also the same process we follow, so you can hand the whole file to a specialist at any point and the work picks up from exactly where the list leaves off.

Does my progress on a checklist save?

On the interactive lists, yes — each item you tick is stored in your browser on this device, so you can close the tab and come back. Nothing is uploaded; clearing your browser data or switching devices starts the list fresh.

How do I know which checklist I need?

Start with the problem. A file that has drifted needs the cleanup checklist; a monthly routine needs the close checklist when it lands. If you are not sure, the bookkeeping health score points you to the right list, and a free review confirms it.