If the Profit & Loss Statement is the performance review of your preschool business, the Balance Sheet is the report card.
And yet, many owners don’t even look at it.
Whether you’re running your school for the long haul or thinking about selling in the next few years, your Balance Sheet plays a critical role in how your business is perceived, valued, and protected. Today we’re breaking down what it is, why it matters, and how to use it to your advantage—especially if selling is on the horizon.
What Is a Balance Sheet?
A Balance Sheet shows your school’s financial position at a single point in time.
It answers three foundational questions:
- What do you own? (Assets)
- What do you owe? (Liabilities)
- What’s left over? (Equity)
It’s different from your P&L, which shows your revenue and expenses over a time period. Instead, the Balance Sheet shows your net worth, how much is tied up in equipment or debt, and whether your business is solvent.
Why It Matters More Than You Think
Most owners focus heavily on profit—and understandably so. Profit tells you how much is left after you pay your bills. But it doesn’t tell you how stable your business is.
That’s what your Balance Sheet reveals.
A buyer looking to acquire your school isn’t just interested in monthly cash flow. They want to know if the business is healthy beneath the surface.
Things buyers will evaluate on your Balance Sheet:
- How much debt the business is carrying
- Whether the listed assets match what’s actually in the building
- If financial statements are consistent and organized
- Whether there’s positive equity—or hidden problems
If your Balance Sheet is messy or missing, it can undermine confidence—even if your P&L looks great.
Common Mistakes Preschool Owners Make
You don’t have to be a CPA to understand your Balance Sheet, but there are some common errors to avoid:
- Only looking at it once a year—or not at all
- Carrying over outdated loan balances
- Listing personal expenses or accounts
- Forgetting to update depreciation on assets
- Letting it contradict the P&L or tax returns
When these problems pop up, buyers take notice. They may question your systems—or your numbers.
What a Buyer-Friendly Balance Sheet Looks Like
If you’re preparing to sell, even within the next 1–3 years, it’s smart to start thinking like a buyer now.
Here’s what a clean, credible Balance Sheet should include:
- Clear separation between personal and business items
- Monthly reconciliation of accounts
- Updated loan balances and asset values
- Retained earnings that match your profits
- Equity that reflects the true value of what you’ve built
Most importantly, your Balance Sheet should match and support the story told by your P&L and tax returns.
How to Review Yours
Even if you have a bookkeeper or CPA, it’s important that you know how to read your own Balance Sheet.
Start by:
- Reconciling your accounts every month
- Reviewing your asset and liability list
- Asking questions about anything that looks unclear or outdated
- Comparing it side-by-side with your P&L
- Cleaning up personal items, unexplained entries, or duplicate accounts
You don’t have to master it—but you do need to manage it. Because when the time comes to sell, your Balance Sheet will either build confidence—or raise concerns.
Download the Balance Sheet Review Checklist
Want help reviewing your balance sheet like a buyer would?
Download my free Balance Sheet Review Checklist—a one-page tool designed just for preschool owners. It includes:
- Quick audit prompts
- Common red flags to fix
- Buyer-friendly tips to clean it up
- And definitions of terms in plain English
This resource helps you get your financial house in order now—so you’re not scrambling later.
https://go.chelseareue.com/BalanceSheet
Want More Help?
You don’t have to navigate the numbers alone.
✅ Download the Balance Sheet Review Checklist in the Resource Library https://go.chelseareue.com/BalanceSheet
📞 Or book a private strategy call with me to review your preschool’s financials
https://go.chelseareue.com/StrategySession
Let’s make sure your school’s financials reflect the true value of what you’ve built.