Bookkeeping for Restaurants in Indianapolis: A Practical Guide
If you own a restaurant in Indianapolis, your books are almost certainly more complicated than your accountant treats them. Daily cash deposits, credit card settlements, tip pools, third-party delivery commissions, food cost percentages, vendor invoices, liquor inventory — none of it fits into the same monthly cadence a typical small business uses.
This guide walks through the specific bookkeeping challenges restaurants face, what they cost when they go wrong, and how to find a bookkeeper who actually understands the industry.
Why restaurant bookkeeping is genuinely harder
Most small businesses have one or two revenue streams and 5–10 expense categories. A restaurant has none of that simplicity. Here's what's actually happening in a typical restaurant's books each week:
Daily sales reconciliation across multiple channels. Toast or Square POS reports one number. Stripe and credit card processors report another. Cash deposits show up at the bank on a 24–48 hour delay. Third-party platforms (DoorDash, Grubhub, Uber Eats) settle on their own schedules with their own commission deductions. Reconciling all of these to a single accurate daily sales figure is non-trivial and most bookkeepers get it wrong.
Tip allocation and tip reporting. Tips received on credit cards need to be tracked separately from sales revenue, then paid out (or pooled and redistributed). IRS requires accurate tip reporting on payroll. Getting this wrong creates compliance risk and frustrated staff.
Food cost as a percentage. A good restaurant runs food cost at 28–32% of food sales. Most struggling restaurants are at 36%+ and don't know it because they're not tracking it weekly. This requires inventory valuation at start and end of period, plus accurate categorization of food purchases vs. paper goods vs. cleaning supplies.
Liquor inventory and pour costs. If you serve alcohol, you have a second inventory system with even tighter margin discipline — a 4-count pour vs. a 5-count pour is a percentage point of margin disappearing. Books need to reflect inventory shrinkage, not just purchases.
Labor cost percentage by daypart. Restaurants run labor at 28–35% of sales. But average labor cost doesn't tell you anything — it's labor on slow Tuesday lunches vs. busy Friday dinners that matters. Bookkeeping that doesn't break this down hides operational problems.
The most common bookkeeping mistakes in Indianapolis restaurants
1. Treating credit card deposits as revenue
When Stripe or Toast deposits $4,200 into the operating account, that's not $4,200 in revenue. That's gross sales minus processing fees minus tip payouts minus chargebacks. Many bookkeepers code the entire deposit as "restaurant sales" — which inflates revenue and hides processor fees that should be tracked separately.
The right way: gross sales recorded daily from the POS, processor fees broken out as a separate expense line, tips passed through as a liability not as expense.
2. Mixing food, beverage, and paper costs
If your "Cost of Goods Sold" line includes food purchases, takeout containers, paper towels, and cleaning chemicals all together, you can't track true food cost percentage. The chart of accounts needs separate lines for: food (raw ingredients), beverage (NA), liquor/beer/wine, paper goods, and supplies.
3. No inventory adjustments
If you only record food purchases as expenses but never adjust for inventory on hand, your food cost percentage will be wrong every month. A proper close requires counting inventory at month-end and adjusting the books to reflect it. Most bookkeepers skip this. The owner ends up looking at numbers that aren't real.
4. Tip pooling and tipped wages handled wrong on payroll
Indiana tipped minimum wage rules require careful tracking of tipped vs. non-tipped hours. Tip credit calculations need to be correct or you face Department of Labor exposure. Most general bookkeepers don't know these rules — they assume your payroll service handles it. Sometimes the payroll service doesn't either.
5. Third-party delivery commissions buried in revenue
When DoorDash deposits $1,500 in your account, that's after they've taken their 25–30% commission. Recording that as $1,500 in revenue means you've already lost the visibility into how much your delivery channel is actually costing you. Should be: gross sales from DoorDash recorded, commission tracked as an expense, net deposit verified against both numbers.
What clean restaurant books look like
If your books were structured properly, here's what you'd see every month within 15 days of close:
- Net sales — gross sales minus comps, discounts, voids
- Food cost % — adjusted for opening and closing inventory
- Beverage cost % — separate from food
- Labor cost % — broken out as kitchen, FOH, and management
- Prime cost — food + labor as % of sales (the operator's most important number)
- Third-party delivery margin — net revenue after commissions
- Operating expenses — rent, utilities, insurance, marketing
- Cash flow position — what's in the bank vs. what's owed
If your current bookkeeper can't produce this report, your books aren't restaurant-grade.
What it costs when restaurant books are wrong
Restaurants run on thin margins. Industry standard is 6–10% net profit on a healthy operation. That means a 2-point error in your food cost tracking can mean the difference between a $200,000 net year and a $100,000 net year on $2M in revenue. The cost of not knowing your real numbers is enormous.
Specifically, here's what restaurants typically lose to bad bookkeeping:
- Untracked theft and waste — pour shrinkage, inventory waste, employee meals not recorded. Industry average is 1–2% of sales.
- Underpriced menu items — you can't reprice if you don't know your cost per dish, and inflation has been brutal on food costs.
- Hidden processor fees — many POS contracts have fee creep over time that nobody catches.
- Tip and payroll errors — over-paying or under-paying based on bad tip data.
- Late vendor payments — vendor relationships sour when invoices are paid late because cash flow isn't tracked.
Indianapolis restaurant scene — local context
Indianapolis has a vibrant restaurant scene from the Fountain Square taproom corridor to Mass Ave's independent spots to the Broad Ripple bar district. Most of these are owner-operated. Most of them are also working with generalist bookkeepers who don't fully understand restaurant accounting.
The local restaurants doing best from a financial standpoint share a few habits:
- Weekly food and beverage cost reviews — not monthly
- Daily sales reconciled against POS the next morning
- Monthly close completed by the 10th of the following month
- A bookkeeper who understands hospitality, not just QuickBooks
What to look for in a restaurant bookkeeper
When hiring someone to handle your restaurant's books, ask:
- Have you worked with restaurants before? Generalist bookkeepers will struggle with daily sales reconciliation and tip accounting.
- How do you handle inventory adjustments? If they say "we don't do those," your food cost percentage will always be wrong.
- Can you reconcile Toast/Square POS to bank deposits including third-party platforms? Multi-channel reconciliation is the core skill.
- What does your weekly P&L look like? If they only deliver monthly, you're flying blind 75% of the time.
- Do you understand tip credit calculations and tipped minimum wage rules? Critical for payroll compliance.
The bottom line for Indianapolis restaurant owners
If your books are giving you a monthly P&L on the 25th, missing inventory adjustments, lumping all food costs into one line, and showing credit card deposits as revenue — you're flying blind. And in the restaurant business, flying blind for 6 months can mean the difference between a profitable year and an unprofitable one.
Clean restaurant books require someone who actually understands the business — not just a bookkeeper who knows QuickBooks. If you're an Indianapolis restaurant owner who wants to see what proper restaurant accounting actually looks like, I'd love to chat.