(For Financial & Insurance Limited Companies — Not Just Filing Your Accounts)
Mark runs a growing mortgage brokerage.
Two advisers.
One admin.
Strong introducer relationships.
Turnover approaching £900,000.
His accountant files his accounts on time.
Corporation Tax gets submitted.
Confirmation Statement done.
Everything is compliant.
So when I asked him,
“How often do you review your dividend capacity?”
He paused.
Because compliance is not the same as strategy.
And in Financial & Insurance Limited Companies, that difference matters more than most directors realise.
The Compliance Illusion
Many financial firms believe they are “covered” because:
- Accounts are filed.
- Tax returns are submitted.
- Payroll runs monthly.
- VAT (if applicable) is handled.
That is the minimum standard.
But you operate in a regulated sector.
You advise clients on risk management, forward planning, protection and long-term structure.
Your own financial strategy should operate to the same standard.
A good accountant does more than report history.
They reduce risk before it appears.
What Most Accountants Actually Do
Let’s be honest.
In many cases, accountants:
- Prepare year-end accounts
- Calculate Corporation Tax
- Submit returns to HM Revenue & Customs
- File with Companies House
- Process payroll
That’s important.
But it’s reactive.
And reactive accounting creates exposure in commission-based businesses.
What a Good Accountant Should Be Doing (Quarterly, Not Annually)
For Financial & Insurance Limited Companies, proactive accounting should include:
1. Quarterly Management Accounts
Not just annual figures.
Quarterly reporting should show:
- Profit trends
- Gross commission patterns
- Overhead ratios
- Cash position
- Director’s Loan balance
- Tax exposure
Because financial firms experience volatile income.
Annual accounts smooth the story.
Quarterly accounts reveal the truth.
2. Dividend Capacity Review Before Payment
Dividends should not be declared casually.
A good accountant should:
- Confirm distributable reserves
- Ensure interim accounts are sufficient
- Prepare dividend minutes
- Calculate personal tax impact
- Confirm cash availability
Dividends without verification are risky.
Especially when commission clawbacks exist.
3. Director’s Loan Monitoring
DLAs should be reviewed quarterly.
Not discovered at year-end.
A proactive accountant should:
- Track informal withdrawals
- Warn when balances approach risk thresholds
- Model dividend clearance options
- Highlight Section 455 exposure early
Surprise tax bills come from poor visibility.
4. Corporation Tax Forecasting — Before Month 9
Month 9 is the critical planning point.
At that stage, a good accountant should:
- Estimate year-end profit
- Forecast Corporation Tax
- Calculate extraction ceiling
- Review pension contribution options
- Stress-test cashflow
Waiting until Month 12 is too late.
5. Cashflow Stress Testing
Commission-based businesses are vulnerable to:
- Pipeline delays
- Case fall-through
- Clawback
- Seasonal dips
Your accountant should ask:
- Could you withstand a £40k clawback?
- Is tax ringfenced monthly?
- How stable is your cash buffer?
- What happens if income drops 20%?
If these conversations aren’t happening, you’re operating on assumption.
6. Extraction Strategy Design
Salary vs dividends is not a once-a-year decision.
It should be structured around:
- Personal tax bands
- Pension strategy
- Mortgage or lending considerations
- Cashflow stability
- Business growth plans
A good accountant designs extraction.
They don’t just calculate it.
7. Tax Efficiency — In Context
Tax efficiency without cash modelling is dangerous.
For example:
- Reducing salary too far can destabilise personal income.
- Over-reliance on dividends increases DLA risk.
- Pension contributions without modelling can strain cash.
Efficiency should never compromise stability.
8. Growth Planning Conversations
When financial firms grow, complexity increases.
A proactive accountant should ask:
- Are you hiring sustainably?
- Do overheads align with turnover?
- Is margin stable?
- Are you building retained profit?
- Is your structure still appropriate?
Growth without modelling creates pressure.
Growth with modelling creates resilience.
The Regulated Sector Standard
Financial professionals are expected to operate with discipline.
Clients trust you with long-term planning.
Regulators expect financial governance.
Your internal financial structure should reflect that standard.
If your accountant only contacts you once a year, that is compliance-level service.
It is not strategic partnership.
Mark’s Realisation
Mark believed everything was fine.
Until we reviewed:
- His Director’s Loan had been overdrawn twice during the year.
- Corporation Tax wasn’t ringfenced monthly.
- Dividends had been declared without interim accounts.
- Cashflow dipped dangerously after a slow quarter.
None of it was illegal.
All of it was avoidable.
Once quarterly reviews were introduced:
- Tax was forecast before Month 9.
- Dividend payments were structured.
- DLA monitored consistently.
- Cash buffer increased.
- Stress reduced.
The business didn’t change.
The visibility did.
The Key Difference
A compliance accountant asks:
“What happened last year?”
A proactive accountant asks:
“What could happen next?”
And in Financial & Insurance businesses, that difference is everything.
Warning Signs Your Accountant Isn’t Being Proactive
- You don’t have quarterly management accounts.
- You don’t know your current Corporation Tax estimate.
- Dividends are declared informally.
- Your DLA balance isn’t reviewed regularly.
- You’ve had unexpected tax bills before.
- Conversations only happen at year-end.
If three or more of those apply…
You don’t have strategic accounting support.
What a Strong Accounting Relationship Feels Like
You should:
- Know your safe extraction ceiling.
- Understand your tax exposure in advance.
- Feel confident about dividend legality.
- Have predictable cashflow visibility.
- Be able to make growth decisions with numbers behind them.
Accounting should reduce stress.
Not create it.
Final Thought
In Financial & Insurance Limited Companies, structure is protection.
You already manage risk professionally.
Your own financial structure should operate at the same level.
A good accountant doesn’t just file.
They forecast.
They challenge.
They structure.
They protect.
Because the goal isn’t just compliance.
It’s control.
If you would like to understand whether your current accounting support is proactive or reactive, we’d be happy to review your structure.
Because the right accountant doesn’t just report your success.
They stabilise it.