Skip to content

Guides · bar method

Bar books in Texas: one drink, two taxes, two directions.

Every mixed drink a Texas bar sells carries two taxes at once — one collected from the customer, one owed by the house — and they run through the books in opposite directions. Most bar files blur them into one account and discover the difference at filing time. This is the setup that keeps them straight: the permit named first, revenue split by regime, and a track for each tax.

Books structure only — rates, taxability, and permits are the Comptroller's, TABC's, and your CPA's territory, and this guide keeps saying so.

Cited to the Comptroller's mixed-beverage rules Operator-built · 40 years
ONE DRINK SOLD MB SALES TAX currently 8.25% of sales price collected from the customer line item or in the price → liability account their money · never revenue MB GROSS RECEIPTS TAX currently 6.7% of receipts owed by the house never a separate bill charge → operating expense your money · accrued monthly MONTHLY FILINGS · BY THE 20TH books reconcile to both, per the Comptroller WHOSE MONEY IS IT? · THAT ANSWER IS THE BOOKKEEPING

In brief

Texas bar books, in four answers.

What's different about a bar?

Two mixed-beverage taxes on the same drink, running opposite directions — one collected (a liability), one owed (an expense) — per the Comptroller. The books need a track for each.

Whose money is which?

The sales tax you collect is the customer's money — liability, never revenue. The gross receipts tax is yours — expense, never a separate charge on the bill. Blurring them is the classic bar-file failure.

Beer-and-wine only?

A different regime: the Comptroller's FAQ puts wine-and-malt-beverage retailers under regular sales tax, not mixed-beverage taxes. Which side your permit falls on is TABC/Comptroller/CPA territory.

Who decides rates and taxability?

The Comptroller — the figures here are theirs, cited and current as of mid-2026, and they can change. The books' job is that whatever the rules say, the accounts already match the filings.

A Westgate framework · the classifying question

The Whose-Money Test.

The Whose-Money Test: every tax that touches a bar's books gets classified by one question — whose money is it? Collected from the customer: it's theirs, held in trust — a liability the moment it's rung, never revenue, gone only when remitted. Owed by the business: it's yours — an expense accrued against the receipts that created it, and never a tax line on a customer's bill. Texas built both answers into the same drink: the mixed beverage sales tax is the customer's (currently 8.25% of the sales price, collected as a line item or in the price), and the mixed beverage gross receipts tax is the house's (currently 6.7% of receipts, which the Comptroller says may not be added to the bill as a separate charge). Rates are the Comptroller's and can change — the test doesn't.

Both failure modes are one wrong answer to the question. Book the collected tax into revenue and the bar looks more profitable than it is until the remittance lands as a fake expense — margins read wrong all year. Treat the gross-receipts tax as the customer's and it shows up where the Comptroller's rules say it can't. And the two interact in one place the books must respect: per the Comptroller's FAQ, the gross-receipts base is mixed-beverage receipts after subtracting the mixed beverage sales tax collected — which is only computable when the two taxes never shared an account in the first place.

WHOSE MONEY IS IT? THEIRS YOURS COLLECTED → LIABILITY never revenue · held in trust drains only when remitted e.g. MB sales tax · regular sales tax OWED → EXPENSE accrued against its receipts never a separate bill charge e.g. MB gross receipts tax the GRT base = receipts minus the collected tax — computable only if the accounts never blur
The Whose-Money Test: collected taxes are the customer's money and live as liabilities; owed taxes are the house's and live as expenses. Texas puts one of each on the same drink — and computes the second from receipts net of the first, which is why the accounts can never blur.

The method

The bar setup, in seven steps.

Permit first, revenue lanes second, tax tracks third — then the daily and monthly rhythm that keeps a bar file examination-ready by default.

1 · Name the permit before the chart

The whole tax regime hangs on what you hold: a mixed beverage permittee's alcohol sales carry the two mixed-beverage taxes, while a wine-and-malt-beverage retailer owes regular limited sales and use tax instead — the Comptroller's mixed-beverage FAQ draws that line explicitly. Which permit you hold and which regime applies is TABC and Comptroller territory, confirmed with your CPA; the books' job is to mirror whichever answer is yours, and everything below assumes it's been named.

2 · Separate revenue accounts by regime and margin

Liquor, beer, wine, food, and non-alcoholic each get their own income account — not because the P&L enjoys company, but because they sit in different tax bases and carry different margins. One 'Sales' account makes both questions unanswerable: what the mixed-beverage taxes apply to, and which category is quietly losing money. Five doors, mapped one-to-one from the POS categories, is the whole discipline.

3 · Build the two tax tracks — one liability, one expense

The Whose-Money Test, explained below. Mixed beverage sales tax is collected from the customer — it posts to its own liability account and never touches revenue. Mixed beverage gross receipts tax is the business's own obligation — it accrues as an operating expense, and per the Comptroller it may not be added to the customer's bill as a separate charge. Two taxes, two accounts, opposite directions; a file with one blurry 'taxes' account fails months before anyone notices.

4 · Make the POS the single door for sales

Every day's sales enter the books from the POS close-out — one daily summary, categories intact, deposits reconciled to it by day, card and cash split honestly, tips held as the liability they are. The bar-specific stakes are the mixed-beverage bases: a POS category mapped wrong doesn't just blur a margin, it misstates a tax base. The daily-summary mechanics are the restaurant playbook, and they apply to bars unchanged.

5 · Accrue and reconcile both taxes monthly

The collected tax's liability balance should equal what the POS says was collected; the gross-receipts accrual is computed on mixed-beverage receipts after subtracting the mixed beverage sales tax — the Comptroller's FAQ states that base math directly. Both then reconcile against the monthly filings, due by the 20th. Preparing and filing the returns is execution your bookkeeper or CPA runs through the Comptroller's system; a liability account that already matches the filing is what makes that execution boring.

6 · Keep comps, spills, and transfers visible

Comped drinks, spillage, kitchen transfers, and staff drinks all move alcohol without moving normal revenue — so they each get tracked in their own lane rather than vanishing into an adjusted total. Whether and how any of them affect a tax base is a determination for the Comptroller's rules and your CPA; the books' job is that when that question is asked, the number exists. The same lanes are what make pour-cost reads honest.

7 · Close monthly and keep everything four years

Bar books get examined — the Comptroller's mixed-beverage rules require records kept at least four years (confirm current requirements), and daily summaries, deposit reconciliations, and filed-return tie-outs are exactly what an examiner asks for. A reconciled monthly close produces that file as a byproduct. The close rhythm is the same one every business needs; bars just have a sharper reason to keep it.

The daily-summary and POS-reconciliation mechanics in step four are the same ones that run a restaurant's books — the restaurant bookkeeping page covers them, along with tips, delivery platforms, and prime cost. The account discipline behind step two is the chart of accounts template, and the monthly rhythm in steps five through seven is the month-end close checklist with two extra reconciliations.

The honest section

Can you run bar books yourself?

The structure in this guide — five revenue lanes, two tax tracks, POS as the single door — is genuinely settable by an owner in an afternoon, and a beer-and-wine place under the regular sales-tax regime is simpler still: one collected-tax liability and no gross-receipts accrual. If volume is modest and someone reconciles the deposits weekly, a well-structured DIY bar file works, and we'd tell you so.

What earns professional hands is the rhythm, not the structure. Bars run high transaction volume across cards, cash, and tabs, seven days a week; the daily summaries pile up fast, and a file that drifts for a quarter becomes a cleanup with a tax-examination clock attached — mixed-beverage records carry a four-year reach and the filings are monthly, every month, by the 20th. That cadence is exactly what bar bookkeeping runs monthly — this whole setup, kept by a senior operator — with sales-tax support keeping both tax accounts reconciled to what actually gets filed. And if the two taxes have been sharing an account for a year, the untangling is cleanup work worth scoping before the next filing, not after.

Want your bar's file read against this setup — the lanes, the two tracks, the tie-outs? The free assessment does exactly that and tells you plainly what's blurred.

Free books assessment

Texas bar FAQ · Updated July 2026

The questions bar owners ask about the books.

A mixed beverage permittee carries two at once, per the Comptroller: mixed beverage sales tax — currently 8.25% of the sales price — which the bar collects from the customer either as a line item or built into the drink price, and mixed beverage gross receipts tax — currently 6.7% of gross receipts — which the bar itself owes on its mixed-beverage receipts and may not add to the bill as a separate charge. Rates and rules are the Comptroller's and can change, so confirm current figures there; which regime your permit puts you in is a TABC, Comptroller, and CPA question. The books' job is carrying each tax in the right account, which is what this guide sets up.
In opposite directions, and keeping that straight is most of bar bookkeeping. The sales tax you collect is the customer's money passing through your hands — it posts to a liability account the moment it's collected, never touches revenue, and drains only when remitted. The gross receipts tax is your own money — it never appears on a customer bill as a tax, so it accrues as an operating expense against the month's mixed-beverage receipts. Book the collected tax as income and your revenue is overstated until the filing hurts; book the gross-receipts tax as if customers owed it and you've misread — and per the Comptroller's rules, mischarged — your own pricing.
Not as a separate tax charge — the Comptroller states plainly that the mixed beverage permit holder may not add it to the selling price as a separate charge or deduct it from the amount received. What is allowed is disclosure: the receipt can carry a statement of the tax the business itself will pay, or a combined statement of the mixed-beverage taxes on the sale. Practically, bars cover the cost the same way they cover rent — in the drink price — and that pricing is a business decision. Receipt-format rules have specifics and can change, so confirm current disclosure options with the Comptroller.
Under the Comptroller's mixed-beverage FAQ, holders of wine and malt beverage retailer permits owe limited sales and use tax rather than the mixed-beverage taxes, because those permits don't meet the definition of a mixed beverage permittee. That's a genuinely different bookkeeping setup: one collected-tax liability track and no gross-receipts accrual. Whether your permit falls on that side of the line — and what happens if your permit changes — is exactly the kind of determination that belongs with TABC, the Comptroller, and your CPA before the books are structured, which is why naming the permit is this guide's first step.
Five as the working floor: liquor, beer, wine, food, and non-alcoholic — each its own income account, each mapped one-to-one from a POS category. The tax reason: the categories sit in different bases, and when a monthly filing or an examiner asks what the mixed-beverage receipts were, the books should answer from account balances rather than from a spreadsheet reconstruction. The margin reason: liquor, draft, bottle, and food run very different costs, and one blended 'Sales' line hides which of them is drifting. Add lanes only where you'd act on the split — draft versus bottle, happy-hour versus regular — and keep the one-door discipline for everything else.
The Comptroller's mixed-beverage rules require records kept for at least four years and producible on request — confirm the current requirement, but plan on it. What that means in bookkeeping terms: daily POS close-outs, deposit reconciliations tying those close-outs to the bank, purchase invoices for alcohol, the monthly filed returns, and the tie-outs showing the books' liability and accrual matched what was filed. None of that is extra work in a file that closes monthly — the close produces the examination file as a byproduct, which is the quiet argument for the rhythm.

Want the whole rhythm handled — nightly tie-outs, both tax tracks, filings reconciled monthly? That's bar bookkeeping on a monthly close. More guides: the guides hub →

Call Free books review