Simplify Your Year-End Accounting with easyStorage's Guide to Essential Document Storage

February 20, 2026

Simplify Your Year-End Accounting with easyStorage's Guide to Essential Document Storage

April, the end of the tax year. As we scurry to get things straight, it’s worth thinking about records. For a business that runs from home, seven years’ worth of records is enough to bring down the floor of the loft. Office space, by contrast, costs from just under £60 square foot in Sheffield to double that in London, with huge variations according to location.

Yet it’s incumbent on business to keep a mass of records – if you keep them on paper, it takes space. Digitising the records costs time and money – one way or another it’s a business cost.

What records need to be kept will depend on the business – clinical and medical notes, for example, have a very different ‘shelf life’ to a gardening firm. Public sector operations have specific policies.

Records must be kept for six years from the end of the last company financial year, longer if a transaction covers more than one accounting period.  Anything that is information about individuals will be subject to current DPA and GDPR rules.

Failure to keep proper records can result in a £3 thousand fine from HMRC, and mistreating someone’s personal details can land a company in hot water.

As a baseline, limited companies of every size will need to keep:

1.       Company Records

·         Details of directors and company secretaries;

·         Paperwork for loan agreements and mortgages secured against the company;

 

2.      Shareholder paperwork

·         Transaction records when someone buys shares in the company;

·         Shareholder’s details;

·         Results of shareholder votes and resolutions;

·         A register of ‘people with significant control’ (Otherwise known as PSCs, these are people with more than 25% shares/voting rights in your company; people who can appoint or remove a majority of directors or who can ‘influence or control your company or trust’.) If there are none, this also needs recording and keeping.

 

 

3.       Accounting records

·         All financial income and expenditure, sales and purchases;

·         Details of any grants;

·         Payments from coronavirus (COVID-19) support schemes;

·         Details of assets and debts, including anything owed to the company – they will need to be kept longer if expected to last longer than six years;

·         Stock (and how its value has been calculated);

·         Annual accounts and tax returns, including all financial records, information and calculations used to prepare them (including receipts, expenses forms, invoices etc);

·         Pay as You Earn records (all payments made to employees, income tax and national insurance deducted plus student loan payments, and any other statutory payments);

·         Benefits records including any paperwork relating to statutory sick pay, statutory maternity, paternity or adoption pay and any employee benefits.

 

4.       Employee records

There is no specific minimum or maximum retention period for employee records. There are many official guidelines, and different companies and professions have different rules. Anything financial (PAYE/benefits etc) needs keeping for six years after the year end in which the employee leaves.

To keep:

·         Employment contracts;

·         Personnel records;

·         Accident record books;

·         Pension arrangements.

Storing this information.

Companies have to manage important documents throughout their lifecycle from creation to destruction, from paper copies to digital archives.

But a certain amount of paperwork is almost impossible to avoid. You’ll need to have a system for archiving, accessing and destroying information.

Importantly, you’ll need to keep records safe and dry. Reputable storage facilities can help with this.

easyStorage is here to help. Some of our locations offer specific document archiving, others make other provisions for keeping your documents safe.

For a no obligation, low-cost quote for storing records across the UK, call 0800 961 4091, where one of the easyStorage storage professionals can talk you through the best options for you.

Please note that this blog, although thoroughly researched from reliable sources, was created as a helpful guide to highlight considerations and should not replace proper legal advice.

Latest popular posts
Discover the articles our readers are engaging with the most right now.

Traditional Storage Vs. easyStorage: Which One is Better

As Hassan Fathy once said, tradition is the social equivalent of personal habits. Habit, comfort zone, belief – these are just some of the words we can associate with the word "tradition." It is something that has been part of our lives that is so difficult to get rid of. Being open to innovation is hard for people who do not welcome the idea of getting out of their comfort zone. The hassle and inconvenience of learning new things are some of the reasons why people do not accept change. However, change is the only permanent thing in the world. We do not have a choice but to keep up with it. Else, we will be left behind.
Learn more →

Seven Tips on How to Declutter Your Home Office

As Christina Scalise put it, clutter is the physical manifestation of unmade decisions fueled by procrastination. Having a home office is becoming part of the new normal. We must keep it clean and orderly for us to become more productive even in the comfort of our homes. Let’s face the truth that when working at home, there are a lot of distractions that we need to overcome to be able to complete our tasks. Clutter is one of the major distractions that commonly happens in a home office. Well, even at an actual office setting.
Learn more →

Seven Tips on How to Declutter Your Home Office

As Christina Scalise put it, clutter is the physical manifestation of unmade decisions fueled by procrastination. Having a home office is becoming part of the new normal. We must keep it clean and orderly for us to become more productive even in the comfort of our homes. Let’s face the truth that when working at home, there are a lot of distractions that we need to overcome to be able to complete our tasks. Clutter is one of the major distractions that commonly happens in a home office. Well, even at an actual office setting.
Learn more →