The payroll mistake we see trigger the most “how are we short on cash?” moments is simple:
Business owners budget for net pay, but forget payroll is a bundle of time-sensitive taxes and liabilities.
So payroll hits, the team gets paid, and then the next wave arrives:
(If those terms don't mean much to you yet, our breakdown of what every payroll tax actually means explains each one in plain English.)
If your books and cash planning treat payroll as “what employees take home,” you will eventually get a cash crunch that feels like it came out of nowhere.
It didn’t. It was just hiding in the payroll tax calendar.
Payroll is not one number. It is several moving parts:
This is the piece everyone sees.
Common examples:
This money sits in your account briefly, but it is not “extra cash.” It is a liability.
Common examples:
The federal deposit schedule can require deposits monthly by the 15th or semiweekly depending on your lookback period, and there are next-day rules in certain cases.
California has its own payroll tax filing and due date structure through EDD, with required filings and a due date calendar.
|
Deadline |
What's Due |
How Often |
Cash Flow Impact |
|
15th of the following month |
Federal employment tax deposit (FIT + FICA) |
Monthly |
Last month's withholdings leave your account in one lump. |
|
3–4 business days after payday |
Federal employment tax deposit |
Semiweekly (if liability exceeds $50K lookback) |
Cash must be reserved immediately, no waiting until month-end. |
|
Aligned with federal schedule |
California PIT + SDI deposit (via EDD) |
Monthly or semiweekly |
A second deposit hits on top of the federal one. |
|
Apr 30, Jul 31, Oct 31, Jan 31 |
Form 941 (federal quarterly return) |
Quarterly |
Must reconcile with all deposits made that quarter. |
|
Apr 30, Jul 31, Oct 31, Jan 31 |
DE 9 + DE 9C (EDD quarterly returns) |
Quarterly |
Late filing = penalties + interest, even if deposits were on time. |
|
Jan 31 |
W-2s + DE 6 (annual wage statements) |
Annually |
Year-end reconciliation, discrepancies trigger follow-up. |
Translation: payroll is not just expensive. It is time-sensitive. Miss a deposit window and penalties start before you even realize the deadline passed.
Here's a pattern we see all the time:
This is why payroll-related cash flow problems feel sudden. The money was already spoken for, it just wasn't reserved.
The core mistake comes in two forms:
Either way, the business feels "profitable" but still runs tight on cash.
Not separating payroll cash from operating cash.
That shows up in two common forms:
Either way, the business feels “profitable” but still runs tight on cash.
California payroll has extra layers that increase the odds of drift:
If you are already busy, it’s easy for payroll to become “run checks now, deal with the rest later.” Later is where the panic lives.
You do not need a complicated system. You need a habit.
As soon as payroll runs, assume a chunk of the cash is already owed.
The cleanest operational approach is to keep payroll money from getting mixed into normal spend decisions.
Many businesses reduce panic immediately by doing one of these:
Either way, the goal is the same: payroll does not compete with vendor bills.
At minimum, monthly bookkeeping should include:
At the federal level, employers generally deposit employment taxes on a monthly or semiweekly schedule, and the due dates differ by schedule.
For California, use EDD’s payroll tax due date resources to align your workflow with the filing and deposit calendar.
If you outsource payroll, don’t assume the provider is handling every deposit and filing by default. Confirm what’s included.
The dates that actually matter for cash flow planning:
If you're on a monthly schedule, circle the 15th of every month. That's when both federal and California deposits are due for the prior month's payroll.
If you're on a semiweekly schedule, you have 3-4 business days after each payday. This means payroll cash needs to be reserved immediately, not at month-end.
Quarterly filings (941, DE 9, DE 9C) are due the last day of the month following each quarter. Miss these and penalties stack fast.
If you want a practical “no drama” payroll workflow, your bookkeeping needs to do two things consistently:
That means payroll entries separate:
You should be able to open your Balance Sheet and clearly see:
If your payroll liabilities are a mystery, cash flow will be a mystery too.
If you answer “no” to two or more, this is worth fixing now.
The payroll mistake that causes most cash flow panic is not “paying employees too much.”
It’s treating payroll like a single expense instead of a timed package of liabilities.
Fixing it usually requires:
When payroll stops surprising you, cash flow gets calmer fast.
Nguyen & Company, CPA helps California businesses clean up payroll postings, tighten monthly closes, and set a cash flow routine that prevents payroll tax surprises.
If you want us to review your payroll setup and your bookkeeping workflow (and show you exactly where the cash flow risk is coming from), book an initial consult with us here.