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A bookkeeper records day-to-day financial transactions — income, expenses, invoices, and payments. An accountant analyses that financial data to produce reports, file tax returns, and provide strategic advice. Both roles are essential to running a practice or a business, but they serve different functions and use different software. Bookkeepers typically use tools like BrightBooks by Bright for transaction recording and VAT management, while accountants rely on software like BrightAccountsProduction by Bright to prepare statutory accounts and file directly with HMRC and Companies House. 

What does a bookkeeper do? 

A bookkeeper is responsible for the accurate, day-to-day recording of a business’s financial activity. Their core responsibilities include: 

  • Recording sales and purchase invoices 
  • Reconciling bank statements against financial records 
  • Managing payments to suppliers and receipts from customers 
  • Preparing and submitting VAT returns 
  • Maintaining the general ledger 
  • Running basic financial reports 

Bookkeeping is the foundation everything else is built on. Without accurate, up-to-date records, an accountant cannot produce reliable year-end accounts or file correct returns. According to the ICAEW, accounting firms spend 39% of their working day on manual tasks — much of which sits in this bookkeeping layer, and much of which can be automated with the right software. 

What does an accountant do? 

An accountant works with the financial data a bookkeeper has recorded and uses it to produce higher-level outputs. Their responsibilities typically include: 

  • Preparing annual and statutory accounts 
  • Filing corporation tax returns and self-assessment submissions 
  • Producing management accounts and financial reports for clients 
  • Advising on tax planning, cash flow, and business strategy 
  • Ensuring compliance with HMRC, Companies House, and relevant accounting standards 

Accountants in the UK are typically qualified through bodies such as ICAEW, ACCA, or CIMA. Bookkeepers do not require a formal qualification, though many hold AAT or ICB accreditation. The distinction in qualification reflects the difference in responsibility — bookkeepers maintain the records, accountants interpret and report on them. 

What is the key difference between bookkeeping and accounting? 

The clearest way to explain the difference: bookkeeping is about recording, accounting is about interpreting. 

Bookkeeping captures what happened financially. Accounting explains what it means — and what to do about it. In practice, the two roles often overlap. In smaller practices, a single person may handle both. But as a client base grows, the roles tend to separate because the complexity at each layer increases. This is also why the software choices for each role are different — a bookkeeper needs fast, accurate transaction management, while an accountant needs compliance-grade reporting tools that can file directly with HMRC and Companies House. 

For a deeper look at why integrating these two layers matters, read our guide on how much processing annual accounts actually costs your practice. 

What software does a bookkeeper use, and what does BrightBooks by Bright include? 

Bookkeepers need software that makes it easy to record transactions, reconcile bank accounts, manage invoices, and handle VAT — from anywhere, at any time. BrightBooks by Bright is designed for exactly this. It is a cloud-based bookkeeping platform built for UK accounting practices and their SME clients, with full Making Tax Digital (MTD) compatibility built in. 

Key features of BrightBooks by Bright include: 

  • Invoicing and payments — Create and send professional invoices, set up recurring billing, and convert quotes and orders to invoices in seconds. The BrightBooks mobile app lets users manage this from anywhere. 
  • Bank reconciliation — Connect bank accounts for automatic transaction imports, giving a live view of cash flow and making month-end or year-end reconciliations significantly faster. 
  • VAT returns — VAT is automatically calculated and submitted to HMRC in line with Making Tax Digital requirements. 
  • At-a-glance dashboards — Customisable dashboards display key financial figures in charts and drilldown tables, giving clients and their bookkeeper clear visibility at all times. 
  • Built-in CRM — BrightBooks includes a CRM tool for managing client relationships, tracking quotes through to invoices, and monitoring the sales pipeline. 
  • Stock management — The Enterprise tier includes inventory tracking, purchase order management, and a full product catalogue. 
  • Security — BrightBooks is hosted on Microsoft Azure, with enterprise-grade security and threat intelligence built in as standard. 

BrightBooks is also ready for the incoming MTD for Income Tax Self Assessment (MTD for ITSA) rollout. For more detail on how BrightBooks supports practices and clients through that change, read MTD for Income Tax is almost here — here’s how BrightBooks makes sure no one gets left behind. 

What software does an accountant use, and what does BrightAccountsProduction by Bright include? 

Accountants need tools capable of producing statutory financial statements, handling iXBRL tagging, and filing directly with Companies House and HMRC. BrightAccountsProduction by Bright is built for this — a cloud-based accounts production platform with over 20 years of development behind it, now available to UK accounting practices. 

Key features of BrightAccountsProduction by Bright include: 

  • 10 client-type templates — All fully compliant with FRS102, FRS102 Section 1A, and FRS105. Templates cover companies, sole traders, partnerships, LLPs, charities, schools, farmers, credit unions, industrial and provident societies, and clubs. 
  • One-click iXBRL production — Instantly converts accounts to fully compliant iXBRL format for direct submission to Companies House, without manual tagging or coding. 
  • E-signing — Request, collect, and track client signatures digitally. Clients can sign from anywhere and progress is tracked in real time. 
  • Direct editing of final accounts — Make changes to final statements without leaving the document, streamlining the review and revision process. 
  • Automatic compliance updates — The platform is cloud-based, so the software updates automatically to reflect the latest regulatory requirements. 
  • BrightBooks integration — BrightAccountsProduction connects directly with BrightBooks by Bright, allowing bookkeeping data to flow into accounts production without re-keying. 

For practices looking at how automation at the accounts production level reduces errors and saves time, the blog on how accounts software automation can cut errors and improve efficiency is worth reading alongside this. 

“With the amount of compliance and regulations these days, knowing BrightAccountsProduction has me 100% covered is a weight off my shoulders.” — Nuala McGowan, McGowan Accountancy Services 

Do I need a bookkeeper, an accountant, or both? 

For most small businesses and growing practices, the answer is both — but at different stages of the financial cycle. A bookkeeper handles the ongoing financial admin throughout the year: invoicing, reconciliation, VAT returns. An accountant steps in at year-end or when more complex outputs are needed: statutory accounts, tax returns, strategic reporting. 

Many accountancy practices offer both services under one roof, with bookkeeping staff handling day-to-day client work and qualified accountants overseeing annual compliance. If you are setting up or reviewing a practice, the software you choose for each layer should reflect this split. BrightBooks by Bright handles the bookkeeping layer; BrightAccountsProduction by Bright handles the accounts production layer — and because the two are integrated, data moves between them without manual re-entry. 

How does BrightAccountsProduction by Bright compare to other accounts production software? 

The main alternatives for UK accountants in this category include tools such as Iris, CCH, and TaxCalc. BrightAccountsProduction by Bright differentiates on three points. First, it integrates directly with BrightBooks by Bright, meaning practices that use both products operate from a single data environment rather than managing separate imports. Second, it is fully cloud-based with automatic compliance updates, removing the need for manual version upgrades or desktop installations. Third, it includes one-click iXBRL production and e-signing as standard features, rather than add-ons — which can reduce the time cost of the annual accounts cycle meaningfully across a busy practice. 

See BrightBooks and BrightAccountsProduction in action 

If you’re weighing up the right software for your bookkeeping or accounts production workflow, the best next step is to see the tools working. Book a demo with the Bright team and get a walkthrough tailored to your practice. 

Book a demo of BrightBooks by Bright 

BrightBooks by Bright is the cloud-based bookkeeping platform built for UK practices and their SME clients — with invoicing, bank reconciliation, VAT returns, and MTD for ITSA readiness all included. Book your BrightBooks demo here. 

Book a demo of BrightAccountsProduction by Bright 

BrightAccountsProduction by Bright is the cloud-based accounts production platform for preparing and filing statutory accounts — with 10 compliance-ready templates, one-click iXBRL, e-signing, and direct integration with BrightBooks. Book your BrightAccountsProduction demo here.