100% Remote

Bookkeeper in Maple Ridge

Trades contractors, equestrian businesses, retail, and growing suburban enterprises. Professional remote bookkeeping, payroll, and CFO advisory — delivered with plain language and honest pricing.

The Maple Ridge business landscape

Maple Ridge has evolved from a quiet suburban community into a thriving business centre with a strong base of trades contractors, equestrian operations, and retail businesses along Lougheed Highway and the town centre. The city's growth has attracted new restaurants, fitness studios, and professional service firms — all of which need reliable bookkeeping and payroll. Fluent Books serves Maple Ridge businesses remotely, saving owners the commute to Vancouver or Burnaby for financial services.

Bookkeeping for Maple Ridge owners — what we actually do

Maple Ridge sits at the edge of suburban Metro Vancouver and the rural-residential ALR land east toward Whonnock and Mission. That mix shapes its business community. Owner-operator trades crews live in Albion or Hammond and work jobs across the entire Fraser Valley. Equestrian operations run boarding, lessons, and breeding on five-to-twenty-acre parcels. Local retailers and home-services businesses serve a fast-growing suburban base. The bookkeeping reality: most of these businesses are tightly run by one or two owners, with payroll for a small crew, equipment that needs proper depreciation, and not enough hours in the week to keep the books current. We take that work off owners' desks: clean monthly close, holdbacks tracked, sub-contractor T5018s ready in February, and a quarterly review that actually answers the question of whether the business is making money or just busy.

What we handle for Maple Ridge businesses

I run a small contracting business and used to do my own books on weekends. Fluent Books took over and now I actually know my numbers. The monthly reports are clear and my accountant loves the year-end package.
Derek P., General Contractor, Maple Ridge

Common questions from Maple Ridge businesses

It depends on your retirement planning, mortgage qualification needs, and tax bracket. Salary creates RRSP room and CPP contribution credit, qualifies you for parental leave EI if applicable, and shows up as employment income on your T1 — banks like that for mortgages. Dividends skip CPP (saving 11.4% combined employer/employee) and EI (which most owners can't claim anyway), but produce no RRSP room and don't count as earned income for some purposes. Most owner-operators end up on a mix. We coordinate with your accountant to set the salary versus dividend split, run the payroll if you take a salary, and track dividends declared at year-end so the T5 is filed correctly.
It can be. BC's Builders Lien Act requires a 10% statutory holdback on most construction contracts, released after substantial completion plus the lien period (45 days in BC). If you've been booking the full invoice as revenue and treating the 10% as a slow receivable, your revenue and AR are both overstated, and if a holdback ever has to be released back to the customer (which happens with deficiencies) you take a hit you weren't expecting. We re-set your holdback handling — 90% to AR/revenue, 10% to a holdback receivable account — and clean up any historical mis-classification so the balance sheet is accurate going forward.
Each revenue stream gets its own income GL account and its own class or location tag in QuickBooks Online, so you can see boarding, lessons, training, and any retail or feed sales as separate lines. Direct costs follow — feed and bedding for boarding, instructor pay for lessons, trainer pay for training, retail COGS for any feed or tack sales. Shared overhead (mortgage, insurance, utilities) sits unallocated unless we have a sensible basis to split it. Within a few months you can see which streams pay for themselves, which subsidise others, and where to focus the next investment of time or money.
The federal small business deduction (SBD) reduces the corporate tax rate on the first $500K of active business income to about 11% in BC. Income above $500K is taxed at the general corporate rate (~27% combined). Once you cross, the marginal rate on every additional dollar of corporate income jumps significantly. We track YTD active business income through the year, flag you as you approach the threshold, and work with your accountant on strategies — bonus accruals to bring income below $500K, paying out dividends, or just accepting the higher rate and planning around it. Multi-corporation groups also share the $500K limit, which adds another layer worth getting right.

Nearby areas we serve

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