Self-Driving Accounting
- Mar 12
- 4 min read
Build financial systems that run themselves so you can focus on patients, not paperwork.
Meet Dr. Old School.
When she launched her own practice, she did what most doctors do: kept her receipts in a drawer, sent spreadsheets to her accountant once a year, and hoped nothing got missed. For a while, it worked. Then one Friday afternoon, she opened a brown CRA envelope and found a 10% payroll penalty staring back at her.

She had missed three months of payroll remittances over the summer. Between clinic hours, hospital shifts, and a well-earned vacation, she simply forgot to log in and send the payments. The result: a $2,400 penalty each month, three months in a row – $7,200 gone. Not because she didn’t earn it, but because she didn’t automate it.
That was the moment she realized her systems were running her, not the other way around.
In true Duplicate Me MD fashion, today’s topic is about making your life easier from an accounting perspective.
If you’ve just launched your medical practice, you already know how quickly the admin pile grows. Every new form, invoice, and remittance seems to land on your desk at the worst possible time. But what if your financial life could run quietly in the background, accurate, on time, and effortless?
That’s the promise of Self-Driving Accounting – a system that takes care of itself once you build the right foundation. The setup takes work; there’s no getting around that. But when crafted properly, your accounting structure can run smoothly for years, freeing you to focus on what matters most: your patients and your growth.
(Note: this memo focuses on the accounting and financial side of your practice. Billings to the
province are covered separately in other Duplicate Me MD posts.)
The Reality Check - Here’s what you’ll actually be responsible for as running your corporation:
1. Bookkeeping & Recordkeeping
Record daily deposits from patient and insurance payments
Enter vendor invoices and receipts into accounting software
Reconcile bank accounts and credit cards
Track and categorize business expenses (supplies, rent, insurance, CME, etc.)
Maintain digital or physical copies of receipts (CRA audit-ready)
Record intercompany transfers (professional corp ↔ holding company)
2. Accounts Receivable (Money In)
Invoice for uninsured services (forms, notes, driver’s medicals)
Track patient and third-party payments
Follow up on overdue invoices
Reconcile provincial health billings
Track rejections or clawbacks from health authorities
3. Accounts Payable (Money Out)
Pay rent, utilities, insurance, and subscriptions
Schedule payments for staff or contractors
Pay suppliers for medical and office supplies
Review recurring expenses for accuracy
Approve reimbursements for CME or mileage
Manage credit card payments
4. Payroll
Process biweekly or monthly payroll
Calculate and remit source deductions to CRA
Issue T4s and T4As annually
Prepare ROEs for staff departures
5. Tax Compliance (HST, Corporate, and Personal)
File HST/GST returns
Maintain ITC documentation
Remit corporate tax installments
Coordinate with your accountant on T2 and T1 filings
Align personal tax planning (salary vs. dividends)
Maintain shareholder loan records
File your annual corporate return
6. Financial Planning & Reporting
Review monthly or quarterly financial statements
Monitor cash reserves and plan for tax payments
Create annual budgets (corporate and personal)
7. Banking
Approve and initiate payments (EFTs, wires, cheques)
Deposit cheques and cash
Manage business accounts and online banking
Set up automatic transfers between accounts
That’s a long list, and yes, it can feel intimidating.
But here’s the amazing part: you can automate 90% of it.
The Good News: Automation Is Your Best Employee
With the right technology stack, most of your accounting work can happen automatically, quietly in the background, taking you less than an hour per month to review.
Here’s what works best for doctors and small clinics:
QuickBooks Online (QBO): your central hub. Link your bank accounts, automate reconciliations, and store receipts digitally.
Dext or QBO Receipt Capture: snap photos of receipts and let them post automatically.
Wagepoint: automate payroll, CRA remittances, and year-end T4s.
And don’t forget banking automation – one of the simplest and most overlooked tools for peace of mind. Set up automatic payments for recurring bills, enable auto-pay on your VISA, and create scheduled transfers to savings or tax accounts. If you find yourself doing the same task repeatedly inside your banking system, stop and ask: is there a better way to automate this?
Chances are, there is – and once you set it up, you’ll never think about it again. When your systems are integrated properly, they don’t just save time; they save money.
Remember Dr. Old School’s $7,200 mistake? Three months of missed remittances, $2,400 in
penalties each month. One month’s cost of inaction was the same as setting up full automation – and automation doesn’t forget to file when you’re on vacation!
Payroll: The Unsung Hero of Simplicity
We’ll dig into salary vs. dividends in another memo, but here’s what you need to know for now: Setting yourself up on payroll early simplifies your financial life.
It keeps your personal taxes on track, eliminates large year-end surprises, and builds RRSP
contribution room automatically. Payroll adds clarity and discipline – two essentials for long-term success.
Final Thought
Think of automation as your first employee – one that never takes vacation, never forgets a
deadline, and always keeps your financial life in order.
Build it once, and it will serve you for years.
That’s the beauty of Self-Driving Accounting – a system designed to give you more of what truly matters: time, clarity, and freedom.
Dr. Old School – One Year Later
A year after that $7,200 wake-up call, Dr. Old School’s systems now run quietly in the background. Bills are paid, payroll files itself, and receipts flow into QuickBooks automatically. Her focus is back where it belongs: on her patients and her life.
You don’t need the same wake-up call. Build automation in from day one, and let Self-Driving
Accounting compound your time where it matters most.





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