Guides
Practical guides for setting up your books, understanding accounting concepts, and getting the most out of Sedna.
Setting Opening Balances When You Migrate Your Books
How to seed account balances when you migrate to Sedna (either with one balanced journal entry or with the Adjust opening balance dialog) and why you must always end with Opening Balance Equity at zero.
Read guideHow to Invite Team Members & Set User Roles
Invite accountants, bookkeepers, and partners to your business in Sedna. Four permission roles (admin, accountant, editor, viewer) let you control exactly what each person sees and does.
Read guideUnderstanding Your Chart of Accounts
Add accounts in Sedna, pick account codes that match your reports, and use subaccounts without breaking your books.
Read guideChart of Accounts: What It Is and How to Set It Up
What a chart of accounts is, how Sedna organizes the five account types, and how to customize your accounts for rental properties, services, or any small business.
Read guideAccounting Basics: What Every Business Owner Needs to Know
Understand the one rule behind all bookkeeping (the accounting equation) and why it matters for your business.
Read guideMulti-Entity Accounting for Investors
Learn how to manage multiple businesses, LLCs, or rental properties in a single workspace with separate books for each.
Read guideJournal Entries: 5 Patterns Every Business Owner Uses
How to create journal entries for revenue, expenses, owner draws, transfers, and credit card charges, with step-by-step examples and the draft-to-posted workflow.
Read guideDebits and Credits Demystified
What debits and credits really mean, why debit isn't 'minus,' and the DEALER mnemonic that makes every journal entry obvious.
Read guideSingle Entry vs. Double Entry Accounting
Single entry vs double entry bookkeeping: how each system works, where single entry breaks down, and which method your business actually needs.
Read guideHow to Read Financial Statements Like a CFO
A beginner's guide to understanding financial statements: income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow, with examples, red flags, and a monthly review checklist for founders.
Read guideProfit First
Why Revenue minus Profit equals Expenses works better than the traditional formula: the multi-account system and behavioral economics behind Profit First.
- 1The Framework That Flips Business Finance
- 2Setting Up Your Allocations
- 3The Twice-Monthly Rhythm
Form W-9: What It Is and When to Collect It
Form W-9 is how a business collects a contractor's or vendor's taxpayer information before paying them. Here's what the form does, who has to fill one out, when to collect it, and how to use the information to file 1099s correctly.
Read guideThe Home Office Deduction: Who Qualifies, How to Calculate It, and What to Keep
A practical guide to the home office deduction: the two qualification tests, the simplified vs. actual method, what evidence the IRS expects, and the entity-specific rules for sole proprietors, partnerships, and S-Corp owners.
Read guide2026 Tax Brackets, IRA, 401(k), and HSA Limits: What You Need to Know
Federal tax brackets for 2026, plus contribution limits and tax benefits for Traditional IRA, Roth IRA, 401(k), Roth 401(k), and HSA accounts, including deduction rules and income phase-outs.
Read guideCan You Claim a Parent as a Dependent? Rules, Tests, and Tax Benefits
How to claim a parent as a dependent on your tax return, including the IRS qualifying relative tests, income and support thresholds, the multiple support agreement for siblings, and the tax benefits you unlock.
Read guideAccountable Plans: How to Reimburse Yourself (and Employees) Tax-Free
An accountable plan lets your business reimburse you (and your team) for home office, mileage, cell phone, and travel expenses tax-free. Here's the IRS rule, who needs one, and how to set it up.
Read guideThe Vehicle & Mileage Deduction: How to Pick the Method That Pays You the Most
A practical guide to deducting business vehicle expenses: who qualifies, the standard mileage rate vs. actual expense method, the heavy-SUV strategy, the records the IRS requires, and how to choose the method that maximizes your deduction every year.
Read guideSelf-Employment Tax: What It Is, How It Compares to W-2, and How to Pay Less
A plain-English guide to self-employment tax: what it is, how it really compares to W-2 payroll tax (the 'double FICA' framing isn't quite right), how much you owe at common income levels, and four ways to legally lower your tax bill. Built for freelancers, side-hustlers, and small business owners, not CPAs.
Read guideThe Augusta Rule: Rent Your Home to Your Business Tax-Free
Learn how IRC Section 280A(g) lets business owners rent their home for up to 14 days per year without reporting the income, and what your business needs to do it right.
Read guide2025 Tax Brackets, IRA, 401(k), and HSA Limits: What You Need to Know
Federal tax brackets for 2025, plus contribution limits and tax benefits for Traditional IRA, Roth IRA, 401(k), Roth 401(k), and HSA accounts, including deduction rules and income phase-outs.
Read guideThe C-Corporation: When It's the Right Trade-off
A practical guide to C-Corps for founders: why VC-backed companies are almost always Delaware C-Corps, how double taxation actually works, the Section 1202 / QSBS perk that gives founders up to $10M tax-free, when to choose Delaware vs. your home state, and when a C-Corp is the wrong choice.
Read guideChoosing a Business Entity: A Decision Guide
A plain-English guide to choosing between sole proprietorship, partnership, LLC, S-Corp election, and C-Corp. The five dimensions you're actually choosing between, a decision tree, and the four mistakes that cost founders the most.
Read guideThe LLC: How It Works and When to Use It
A practical guide to the LLC: what it actually is at the state level, how single-member and multi-member LLCs differ, the four tax options (default pass-through, S-Corp, C-Corp), the liability shield (what it does and doesn't protect), the operating agreement nobody talks about, and a worked example of a two-partner consulting LLC.
Read guideThe S-Corp Election: How and When It Saves Money
A practical guide to the S-Corp election: what it actually is (a tax election, not an entity), when the math works, the reasonable-salary problem, the California exception, and a worked example showing $7,000 to $10,000 in annual savings at typical small-business profit levels.
Read guideSole Proprietorships and General Partnerships
A practical guide to the two cheapest, most common, and most dangerous default entities: sole proprietorships and general partnerships. What each one is, when they make sense (briefly), the accidental-partnership trap that catches thousands of people a year, and exactly when to upgrade to an LLC.
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