The Food Bookkeeper

Why You're Profitable But Still Broke — Explained

We’re Profitable — So Why Are We Always Out of Cash?

If you’ve ever looked at your monthly P&L, saw a profit, but still couldn’t make payroll or pay your vendors on time — you’re not alone. This is one of the most frustrating realities for many restaurant owners. You’re busy, your tables are full, and sales look strong — but the cash simply isn’t there.

So what’s going on?

Let’s break it down in a way that makes sense — without the accounting jargon.

  1. Profit Isn’t Cash (And That’s a Big Deal)

You might be “profitable” on paper, but if your cash is tied up in unpaid invoices, inventory, or excessive expenses — your bank account won’t reflect that success.

Here’s a quick analogy: You sell a steak for $50. You made the sale — great. But if you bought the meat on credit, haven’t paid your supplier yet, and your staff hours for that night were overtime, your actual cash might be negative.

Bottom line: Profit is an accounting figure. Cash is what keeps the lights on.

  1. Untracked Expenses Eat Up Margins

Restaurants run fast — and loose. You’re constantly spending: rush orders, emergency repairs, one-off purchases. If these aren’t tracked in real-time, your profit numbers become meaningless.

Signs this might be happening:

  • You don’t know your weekly or daily break-even point.
  • You find surprises on your credit card bill.
  • Your accountant only talks to you at tax time.
  1. Sales Are High, But So Is Waste

Are you throwing out inventory? Over-portioning? Comping too many meals? High sales don’t mean high profit if your food costs and labor aren’t controlled.

Fix this by:

  • Tracking food waste daily.
  • Measuring plate cost vs. price.
  • Monitoring your prime cost (COGS + labor) — this should ideally stay under 60%.
  1. You’re Paying Yourself Last (or Not at All)

Many restaurant owners survive on what’s left — if anything — after everyone else is paid. This isn’t sustainable. If your business can’t afford to pay you a regular salary, there’s a deeper financial issue that needs solving.

  1. Your Bookkeeping Is Outdated or Inaccurate

This one’s big. If you’re not getting up-to-date, restaurant-specific reports, you’re steering your business blindfolded.

A general bookkeeper might lump everything under “food,” “labor,” and “expenses.” But a restaurant bookkeeper breaks it down: food vs. beverage, dine-in vs. delivery, payroll taxes, tip credits, weekly labor trends — the kind of insight you actually need to make decisions.

Here’s How to Fix It

  • Start with real-time, restaurant-specific bookkeeping.
  • Review cash flow weekly — not monthly.
  • Understand your true prime cost and profit margins.
  • Work with a bookkeeper who understands the restaurant business.

Don’t Just Be Busy. Be Profitable — With Cash to Show For It.

If this sounds familiar, you don’t need to figure it out alone. We help restaurant owners like you take control of your numbers — and finally see the money they work so hard for.

Book a free 20-minute consultation and let’s find where your cash is hiding.

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