
Why Offshored Accounting Always Fails
February 24, 2026Your Property Accounting Is Broken. Here’s Why.
This article is for property managers and real estate operators who want to understand common property accounting pitfalls and learn how to build a stronger financial foundation. Addressing these issues is crucial for avoiding costly errors, ensuring compliance, and supporting business growth.
Most property managers are running their property accounting on a financial foundation that would make a first-year accounting student cringe.
I’m not trying to be harsh. I’m trying to save you from a very expensive lesson.
After cleaning up 50+ sets of property books — first rebuilding internal operations at a firm that scaled from 1,600 to 3,100 units, then replicating that same process for clients after starting 20 Mile Consulting — I’ve seen the same disasters repeat themselves. Different companies, same problems.
Recognizing these recurring issues is the first step toward fixing broken property accounting and building a stronger financial foundation.
Here’s what’s actually going on at many property management companies — and what to do about it.
What Is Property Accounting and Why Does It Matter?
Property accounting is critical for measuring the profitability of real estate holdings. It requires separation of funds, an ultra-efficient payables process, precise record-keeping, and regular financial reporting according to GAAP standards. This specialized approach ensures that each property’s income, expenses, and financial health are tracked accurately, supporting better decision-making and compliance for property managers and real estate firms.
You’re Using Cash Basis Accounting and Calling It “Financials”
Let’s get this out of the way first.
Cash basis accounting tells you one thing: when money moved. That’s it. It tells you timing, not performance. Cash basis records revenue and expenses only when cash changes hands, while accrual accounting records revenue and expenses when they are incurred or earned.
Key Issues with Cash Basis Accounting:
- You cannot tell whether a “great month” was real or just a collection timing fluke.
- You cannot determine whether your maintenance spend is trending up or you just paid three old invoices at once.
- You cannot accurately compare Asset A to Asset B, risking apples-to-oranges analysis.
Using the wrong method can cause you to lose track of important financial transactions and liabilities, making it impossible to get an accurate picture of your portfolio’s health.
Real accounting is accrual. Revenue gets recorded when it’s earned. Expenses when they’re incurred are crucial for accurate income and expenses tracking in property accounting. Now you can line up your properties side by side to see what’s actually happening and make decisions. The choice of accounting method in real estate sets the foundation for how income, expenses, and overall financial health are viewed.
Then you layer in a cash flow statement to track liquidity.
And here’s the part most operators conveniently ignore: if you’re syndicating, accrual accounting isn’t a preference — it’s a legal requirement. Most sophisticated investors expect it regardless. Yet a shocking number of firms are still handing their LPs cash-basis reports and hoping the IRS doesn’t notice they’re not in compliance. Some are doing it out of laziness. Others genuinely don’t know any better.
Most small and mid-sized management companies stick to cash basis for one reason: their accounting team isn’t capable of doing accrual properly. So they default to what they know.
But accounting method is just one piece of the puzzle—timely financial processes are equally important.
Your Month-End Close Takes 20+ Days. That is Unacceptable.
I walked into a fast-growing investment firm a few years ago that had its own property management company. Their close was dragging past 20 days every single month.
Nobody was bothered by it. It had just always been that way with their property accounting.
Within a year, we got it to 8 days — while simultaneously doubling the size of the portfolio.
Not by hiring a massive team. Not by working nights forever. By streamlining four things that should have been fixed years earlier.
- We actually used the property accounting software we were paying for. AppFolio, the most popular property management software for newer companies, has bulk upload features, automated bank feeds and management fees, and recurring entry tools that most firms completely ignore. We also built out AI workflows using Claude to handle things like utility bill processing — what used to take hours now takes minutes. Most operators are sitting on automation they’ve never touched. Automated reporting within the software provided real-time data insights and improved efficiency, supporting faster, more accurate decision-making.
- We killed manual expense reporting. Switching corporate cards to Ramp was a game changer for our accounts payable process. Centralized database, real-time GL coding, automatic categorization. Credit card reconciliation went from taking weeks to three days. These changes improved efficiency and eliminated time-consuming manual processes that previously slowed down our workflow. If your team is still chasing receipts over email, you’re manufacturing your own chaos.
- We hired people who actually knew accounting. The books were previously being handled by people with no real accounting education or experience. That’s not a knock on them — it’s a management failure. We brought in real property accountants and supplemented them with trained VAs to keep costs in line. Cheaper doesn’t work if you spend half your month cleaning up mistakes.
- We stopped doing everything at month-end. Recurring journal entries, accruals, prepaid schedules — as much as possible was set up in advance and running automatically throughout the month. Well-defined processes supported by technology streamlined the month-end close, so by the time the 1st hit, we weren’t scrambling to start our financial reporting process. We were finishing.
A 20-day close isn’t about complexity. It’s about standards. If you tolerate three-week financials, you’ll always have a three-week wait before you receive month-end financials.
Using specialized accounting software can streamline property management bookkeeping and enhance financial reporting.
Timely processes are essential, but the quality of your accounting team and partners is just as critical.
Cheap Offshore Bookkeeping Will Cost You More Than It Saves
I’ve worked with a dozen offshore accounting firms. Every single one was a disaster. And the reason I know that? Because most of our clients were using them before they found us.
Here’s the pitch you get every time: polished US-based sales rep, slick deck, “bench of experts” ready to start Monday. $6/unit. 70% cheaper than domestic talent.
Sounds good until reality shows up.
The people aren’t the problem. They’re often smart, hardworking, and trying their best. But property management accounting and bookkeeping isn’t plug-and-play. It’s messy. It requires critical thinking, familiarity with tax laws, settlement statements, and problem-solving when things go sideways — and in property management, things always go sideways.
Here’s what we actually find when we take over from these firms:
- Balance sheets that haven’t been reviewed in a year. Not an exaggeration. These firms push out monthly P&Ls and treat the balance sheet as a dumping ground to plug numbers to. It’s where all the bodies are buried and nobody’s looking. With one of our clients, we recently found a settlement statement that was entered on the closing date and then again later in the year – so everything was overstated by double. The only way this wasn’t caught is because nobody ever reviewed.
- CAPEX vs. R&M treated as a coin flip. A $15,000 roof replacement hitting your income statement as a repair and maintenance expense is not a minor coding error. It’s a significant misstatement that distorts NOI, screws up your tax position, and makes your financials meaningless for any kind of investment analysis.
- Prepaid rent recorded as income. This one is catastrophic for syndicators. When tenants pay early, that money isn’t earned yet — it’s a liability. Book it as income and you’re overstating NOI, inflating distributions, and setting up your LPs for a very uncomfortable conversation. We’ve seen this distort NOI by tens of thousands of dollars in a single quarter.
- Tax accruals booked from January on a property purchased in July. They’re following an SOP that says “accrue property tax every month for X amount” and have absolutely no idea that the purchase date matters. Six months of phantom accruals sitting on your books because nobody thought to ask a basic question.
- Cleanup work they charge for and never do. One of our clients paid a premium for a cleanup project. For weeks, the offshore firm kept saying “almost done, almost done.” Then the person assigned to the project quit. Other than a few small changes to the chart of accounts – the books were untouched. They had the nerve to keep billing.
- Owner distributions recorded as LP distributions. This is a perfect example of what happens when you hand property accounting to someone with zero industry context. They see the word “distribution” thrown around and assume it means equity going out to investors. They have no idea they’re looking at a simple cash transfer from one account to another — money moving from the PM trust to an owner-held account. The LPs aren’t getting anything. They don’t even know what an LP is. Accurate reporting for owners is critical, as owner distributions must be clearly distinguished from LP distributions to ensure owners receive correct financial information and to support strategic decision-making.
The cleanup cost alone usually wipes out whatever you saved on the hourly rate. We’ve never taken over a set of books from one of these firms and found anything that remotely resembled good property accounting. Not once.
The quality of your accounting partners matters, but so does having the right level of expertise in-house.
You Can’t Afford a Full-Time Controller. That Doesn’t Mean You Go Without.
The median Controller salary is $185K — and that number climbs even higher once you stack on benefits, payroll taxes, and a recruiter fee. And if you think you can solve the problem by hiring one level down, a good Accounting Manager is going to run you $125K or more. The savings aren’t as dramatic as you’d think, and you’re still not getting the strategic oversight you actually need. For specialized property accounting needs, having a real estate accounting leader is essential to ensure accurate financial records, compliance, and informed decision-making.
For a firm under 2,000 units, that math doesn’t work. The Director of Property Management wins every budget fight because they generate revenue. The Controller is overhead.
So what happens? Firms either:
- Option A: Hire a $90K “Controller” who isn’t actually qualified for the role. Quality accounting leadership is in high demand, if they were good, they’d be making way more. You’re not getting a bargain — you’re getting whoever couldn’t get hired anywhere else.
- Option B: Offshore the work with no oversight and hope the books somehow hold together until tax season. We just covered how that ends.
Both are expensive. Neither solves the problem.
Requirements for Effective Property Accounting:
- Compliant, accurate financials
- Timely payment of vendor invoices
- Month-end close under 10 days
- Someone who can explain to investors or asset management why cash flow is down while NOI is flat
The fractional model exists because the Controller role is critical, but the full-time salary isn’t justified at this scale. For $1,500–$5,000/month, you get 10–30 hours of real CPA-level oversight without the six-figure anchor on your payroll. Many real estate firms are turning to outsourcing controller and CFO services to improve financial accuracy and compliance.
That’s not a workaround. That’s the right answer for firms under 2,000 units.
Outsourcing property accounting can also free finance leaders to focus on portfolio growth and strategic decision-making.
Having the right oversight is essential, but regulatory compliance is the hidden risk that can undermine everything.
Regulatory Compliance: The Hidden Risk in Property Accounting
Regulatory compliance isn’t just a box to check—it’s the silent threat lurking in the background of every property management company’s books. Ignore it, and you’re not just risking a slap on the wrist. You’re opening the door to fines, audits, legal headaches, and a reputation hit that can scare off investors and clients alike. In property management, the cost of non-compliance can be catastrophic for your financial health.
Accounting Methods and Compliance
Here’s the problem: compliance isn’t simple. Real estate companies juggle a maze of accounting methods—accrual accounting, cash accounting, and everything in between. Pick the wrong method, or apply it inconsistently, and your financials become unreliable. Worse, you could be out of step with tax compliance requirements, missing out on legitimate tax deductions, or misreporting income and business expenses. That’s how you end up with a tax bill you didn’t see coming, or an audit that eats up months of your time.
The Role of Accounting Software
The right accounting software is your first line of defense. Modern property management platforms can automate report generation, track income and expenses, and help you prepare financial statements that actually stand up to scrutiny. But software alone isn’t enough. You need a property management chart of accounts that’s built for real estate—one that captures every financial transaction, from rent payments and security deposits to property maintenance and capital improvements. If you’re not recording transactions accurately, you’re setting yourself up for trouble.
Property Maintenance and Compliance
Property maintenance and improvements are another compliance minefield. Misclassify a major property improvement as a routine operating expense, and you could distort your property value and lose out on tax benefits. Miss a required repair, and you might face regulatory penalties or even lawsuits. Every dollar spent on your properties needs to be tracked, categorized, and justified—not just for your own records, but for tax filing and investor reporting.
The Importance of Regular Reviews
Unexpected expenses, lost revenue, and operating costs can all throw off your compliance if you’re not vigilant. That’s why regular review of your financial records isn’t optional—it’s essential. Real estate accountants and property managers need to stay on top of every detail, from tracking business expenses to preparing timely tax filings. Waiting until tax season to clean up your books is a recipe for disaster.
Bottom line: regulatory compliance is a moving target, and the stakes are high. The best property management companies treat compliance as a core part of their accounting process, not an afterthought. They invest in the right systems, keep accurate records, and make sure their team is trained to spot issues before they become problems. That’s how you protect your business, your clients, and your reputation—while building a foundation for growth.
Don’t let compliance be the hidden risk that takes down your business. Make it a priority, and you’ll sleep better at night—knowing your financial statements are accurate, your tax position is solid, and your company is built to last.
Compliance is critical, but building a robust accounting infrastructure requires best practices at every level.
Best Practices
After doing this at scale internally and building it from scratch for clients, here’s the model that consistently delivers:
The growing demand for efficient property accounting services means property management companies must adopt best practices to stay competitive and meet client expectations.
US-Based Oversight
- Experienced, US-based management oversight on every piece of work before it goes out the door. Not reviewing it once a year. Catching problems in week two, not month twelve.
Supplemented Overseas Talent
- Trained overseas accounting talent executing against clear SOPs. Not a random VA dropped into chaos. Someone who has been onboarded properly, understands real estate-specific accounting, and has a US-based manager they can escalate to. SOPs must ensure all financial activities—including those related to different property types and rental properties—are accurately tracked and reported.
Modern Tech Stack
- A modern tech stack that you actually use. AppFolio or Buildium for property management accounting software. Ramp for corporate cards and AP. QBO as a general accounting software for corporate books. Tools aren’t valuable if your team uses 10% of the features and works around the rest manually. Cloud-based accounting solutions provide real-time access to financial data and flexibility, allowing property management companies to manage finances from anywhere and make timely decisions.
Aligned Incentives
- Aligned incentives. We charge a per-unit fee, and the cost per unit goes down as you scale. That means we’re not just rooting for your growth — we’re financially incentivized by it. We also take your internal corporate operation seriously, investing in building out a real FP&A function including budgeting, cash flow forecasting, and variance analysis. This includes preparing financial statements, tax preparation, and developing annual operating budgets to align with owner goals and track operating expenses. When you make more money and grow faster, we both win. That’s the way it should work.
This is the infrastructure that lets you close in 8 days, answer investor questions confidently, and scale without your back office falling apart under the weight of growth.
The Bottom Line
Your books are either an asset or a liability. There’s no neutral.
Bad accounting doesn’t just slow down your close. It blinds you to financial health of your properties. You can’t see which ones are bleeding. You can’t answer basic questions from lenders or investors without scrambling. You can’t tell if you’re actually improving as an operator.
The firms that figure this out stop treating accounting like a necessary evil and start treating it like the infrastructure it actually is. They close faster, raise capital easier, and make better decisions because they can actually see what’s happening inside their own business.
The choice isn’t between expensive and cheap. It’s between doing it right and paying for it twice.
If you’re managing under 2,000 units and your back office is holding back your front office, that’s a solvable problem. You don’t need a $185K Controller. You need the right system, the right people, and someone who actually gives a damn about your growth.
That’s what we built 20 Mile to do.
Visit 20mileconsulting.com to learn more or book a free strategy call.





