Ecommerce

Accounting for eCommerce Businesses: Making Sense of the Chaos Behind the Cart
- Orders from different places
- Payments from Stripe, PayPal, and Amazon are all on their schedule
- Fee charges that get missed
- Inventory tracked in random files
- Taxes no one warned you about
The Real Financial Challenges in eCommerce (And Why They Build Up Quietly)
eCommerce accounting isn’t just “more bookkeeping.” It’s a whole new thing where most of the problems stay hidden until it’s too late.
- The main money problems each industry faces
- Why copy-paste accounting advice often causes trouble
- Simple ways to make accounting work better for your field
- How tools like Xero, QuickBooks, NetSuite, and Zoho behave differently depending on your setup
- Shopify
- Amazon FBA
- Etsy
- Wholesale / B2B
- Affiliate sales
- Digital products
- Different state tax rules
- VAT needs (even if you’re small)
- Who collects the tax, you or the platform
- Cross-border rules (some need full invoices)


- Reports that don’t make sense
- Margins that go up and down every month
- No idea when to reorder or stop ads
Stripe takes out its fees first.
PayPal might hold money.
Amazon splits payments.
If you only count what reaches your bank, you miss income and mess up taxes.
- Track your full income at the start (before fees)
- Group all fees and returns by platform
- Match payments with bank data so nothing is missed
- Link your product costs with your sales
- See how much each platform really earns, not just totals
Shopify
- Shows full income but not always fees, shipping, or returns
- Apps can double up data or label things wrong
- Stripe and Shopify Payments need manual checks
Amazon (FBA + MFN)
- Amazon pays you after taking fees. Reports are needed to understand it
- Refunds and storage costs are often missed
- Payment times don’t match monthly reports
Etsy, eBay, WooCommerce, Others
- Etsy takes fees at many steps (listing, payment, more)
- WooCommerce depends on plugins can break easily
- No clear split between retail and wholesale
Regional Compliance Notes
United States
- Tax rules change by state
- You might owe tax even if you don’t live there
- Some sites collect tax for you, others don’t


United States
- Tax rules change by state
- You might owe tax even if you don’t live there
- Some sites collect tax for you, others don’t
United Kingdom
- VAT is needed after £85,000
- You must use software that fits MTD rules
- Selling to the EU after Brexit adds more steps
Australia
- GST needed after AUD 75,000
- Some platforms collect GST, others don’t
- Some global sales are tax-free
Canada
- Tax rules change by province
- CRA wants a full paper trail for online sales
- You must track shipping costs clearly
To know what’s really making money.
To avoid getting in trouble.
To stop feeling lost around tax time.
This peace doesn’t come from more reports. It comes from setting up your numbers in a way that fits how online sales work.
If you’ve ever said,
“I am not believing my numbers or what to do about them, I guess,”
You’re not the only one.
And you’re not far from sorting it out either.
