Probably simpler accounting then. I have a lot of individual invoices to keep track of + multiple revenue streams, some of which have sales taxes, some don't.
(You have been keeping invoices, right? You need those in case of audit, which will almost certainly happen at some point).
I'm assuming you are declaring all expenses which are business expenses. If you're doing that and the number of invoices is small, then you probably have a fundamentally simpler business than most businesses.
Might still be worth a one off conversation with a good tax lawyer or accountant to see if you're making any business-101 level errors. If you've never had that sort of conversation, it's somewhat likely.
Example: in Canada, most entrepreneurs I know have no idea that health insurance is a business deduction, and that they can get group health insurance through a chamber of commerce. This usually pays for itself due to the tax deduction plus reimbursements. So there may be similar no brainer, no maintenance changed you could make, once.
(You have been keeping invoices, right? You need those in case of audit, which will almost certainly happen at some point).
I'm assuming you are declaring all expenses which are business expenses. If you're doing that and the number of invoices is small, then you probably have a fundamentally simpler business than most businesses.
Might still be worth a one off conversation with a good tax lawyer or accountant to see if you're making any business-101 level errors. If you've never had that sort of conversation, it's somewhat likely.
Example: in Canada, most entrepreneurs I know have no idea that health insurance is a business deduction, and that they can get group health insurance through a chamber of commerce. This usually pays for itself due to the tax deduction plus reimbursements. So there may be similar no brainer, no maintenance changed you could make, once.