Skip to content

Tools · cost estimator

What might your books repair cost? An honest band, not a fake number.

Cleanup, catch-up, or both — this estimator places your situation inside our published $1,500–$5,000 one-time range using the drivers you can actually know from outside the file: months, accounts, volume, and what's at stake in the gap. Ranges out, never a single dollar figure — the math is published below.

Runs in your browser; nothing you enter leaves the page. Every figure is our own published pricing — no market averages, no invented precision.

Published ranges only The math, in the open

What moves the band

Months & accounts

Periods interact rather than stack — more months and more accounts move the band more than linearly.

Volume & the both-case

Transaction count sizes the pass; behind-AND-wrong adds the interleaving work of two jobs on one file.

Liabilities in scope

Payroll or collected sales tax raises the prove-it standard on those accounts — and the band with it.

The estimator

Five inputs, one honest band.

1 · What's the situation?


2 · How many months are affected?


3 · How many accounts are involved (bank, cards, loans, processors)?

4 · Monthly transaction volume, roughly?

5 · Payroll or collected sales tax in the affected months?

The band becomes one fixed number in writing after the free review — sometimes lower than the tool shows, always explained, never hourly.

Free books assessment

The math, in the open

Exactly how your inputs move the band.

No black box: each answer scores points, the total picks the band, and every band lives inside the published $1,500–$5,000 range. Score yourself if you prefer.

DriverPointsWhy it moves the price
Months affectedUp to 3 = 0 · 4–12 = 1 · 13–24 = 2 · 25+ = 3Periods interact rather than stack — each unproven month corrupts the next month's starting point.
Accounts involved1–2 = 0 · 3–5 = 1 · 6+ = 2Every account is its own reconciliation per month — the work multiplies across them.
Transaction volumeLight = 0 · Moderate = 1 · Heavy = 2Volume sizes the categorization and matching pass inside every month.
Liabilities in scopeYes = +1Payroll and collected-tax accounts get rebuilt to a prove-it standard — other parties rely on them.
Behind and wrong+1Two jobs interleaved on one file — the missing months and the drifted ones untangle together.

The bands: 0–2 points → $1,500–$2,500 · 3–5 points → $2,500–$4,000 · 6+ points → $3,500–$5,000+, with the top end scoped precisely in the review. "Records gone" skips the scoring entirely — that's reconstruction, priced from what survives, not from a formula. Two honest asymmetries worth knowing: the review sometimes finds your job is really a QuickBooks-file-only cleanup at the published $750–$2,500, and a genuinely tidy gap sometimes gets the answer "do it yourself, here's the free method." The full mechanics of why repairs cost what they cost — error density, the compounding math, what makes quotes vary between firms — are in the cleanup cost guide and its QuickBooks twin; all published figures also live on the pricing page, dated.

Estimator FAQ · Updated July 2026

Direct answers about the estimate.

From our own published pricing, nowhere else. A one-time books repair — cleanup, catch-up, or both — is published at $1,500–$5,000, and a QuickBooks-file-only cleanup at $750–$2,500; those pages and our pricing page carry the same numbers, dated and standing. The estimator's only job is placing your inputs inside that published band — months affected, accounts involved, transaction volume, liabilities in scope. It never invents a market average and never outputs a figure our own pages don't already publish.
Because an exact number produced before anyone opens your file would be theater, and we've written at length about why instant quotes move later. The honest cost drivers — how deep the drift runs inside recorded months, how the errors interact, what the diagnostic actually finds — are visible only in the file itself. So the estimator narrows the published band using what you can genuinely know from the outside, and the free review turns that band into one fixed number in writing. Anyone offering more precision from five inputs is selling the later surprise.
Neither, in both directions. It's indicative: your real quote can land below the band the tool shows (the review sometimes finds a QuickBooks-file-only job at the $750–$2,500 published range, or a tidy gap that's genuinely DIY-able — and we say so), and a file with drift the inputs couldn't see can scope higher, explained line by line before anything starts. The number that binds is the one in writing after the free review — fixed, never hourly, no rush fees. The tool exists so you walk into that conversation calibrated, not so it replaces the conversation.
Because that answer changes the job's nature, not just its size. When records are missing entirely, cost is driven by what your bank, processor, and payroll provider can still produce — which no formula can see from here — and by whether the recovery check finds a copy that shrinks the whole job. That's financial reconstruction, scoped after the free review reads what survived. Showing you a band for it would be exactly the invented precision this tool exists to avoid.
No. The estimator runs entirely in your browser — no inputs are submitted, stored, or connected to you. The single thing recorded is an anonymous analytics event noting that a result appeared and which band it was (lower, middle, upper, or the reconstruction route), so we can tell whether the tool earns its place — never your answers, never anything identifying. Your situation gets shared with us only if and when you choose to book the review.

Ready for the band to become one fixed number in writing? The free assessment — a senior operator, your real file, one business day.

Call Free books review