5 Ways to Strengthen Cash Flow
News, Tax & Accounting

5 Ways to Strengthen Cash Flow Before the End of Financial Year

As the end of financial year starts to come into view, now is a smart time for business owners to check in on cash flow. While June can often bring a sharper focus to tax, reporting and compliance, April is the ideal time to get proactive.

Cash flow challenges do not always come from one major issue. More often, they build quietly through slow-paying clients, poor visibility over upcoming expenses, rising costs or a lack of planning around what is ahead.

The good news is that a few practical changes now can make a meaningful difference before EOFY arrives. Here are five ways to strengthen cash flow and head into the final stretch of the financial year with more confidence.

Review what is coming up before June

One of the biggest causes of cash flow stress is being caught off guard by expenses you knew were coming but had not properly planned for.

Take the time to map out your upcoming obligations over the next few months. This might include BAS, super payments, wages, supplier invoices, loan repayments, software renewals or any larger seasonal costs specific to your business.

When you can clearly see what is approaching, it becomes much easier to plan ahead and avoid that last-minute scramble. Even a simple cash flow forecast for the next 8 to 12 weeks can give you a much clearer picture of where pressure points may sit.

Tighten up your invoicing and payment follow-up

If money is not coming in on time, cash flow can tighten quickly, even when sales look healthy on paper.

Now is a good time to review your invoicing process. Are invoices being sent promptly? Are your payment terms still appropriate? Are overdue accounts being followed up consistently?

Small improvements in this area can have a big impact. Sending invoices faster, shortening payment terms where appropriate and having a more structured follow-up process can all help improve the timing of cash coming into the business.

Cash flow is often about timing just as much as it is about profit.

Reassess your expenses

Over time, it is easy for costs to creep up without much notice. Subscriptions, platforms, direct debits, underused tools and small recurring expenses can quietly eat into your cash position month after month.

April is a great time to review what your business is spending and ask a few simple questions. Are you still using everything you are paying for? Are there services that can be reduced, renegotiated or removed? Have supplier costs increased without you properly factoring that into your budget?

This is not necessarily about cutting corners. It is about making sure your spending is aligned with what your business actually needs right now.

Check whether your pricing still stacks up

For many business owners, pricing is one of the biggest hidden cash flow pressure points.

If your costs have increased over the past year but your prices have stayed the same, your margins may be tighter than they should be. That can leave you working hard without seeing the cash flow benefit you need.

Review your pricing with fresh eyes. Consider whether your current rates still reflect the value you deliver, the cost of doing business and the level of profit required to keep things sustainable.

Even modest pricing adjustments can improve cash flow and help relieve pressure heading into EOFY.

Get visibility over your numbers

When cash flow feels tight, many business owners respond by pushing harder without stopping to look at the full picture. But better decisions start with better visibility.

Understanding your numbers means more than checking your bank balance. It means knowing your margins, what is coming in, what is going out, what is overdue, what is owed and what your next few months are likely to look like.

This kind of visibility gives you more control and helps you make confident decisions around spending, hiring, tax planning and growth. If cash flow has felt unclear or reactive, now is the time to put stronger systems and reporting in place.

Act Now

Strengthening cash flow before the end of financial year does not have to mean making huge changes. Often, it comes down to getting organised, improving visibility and making a few smart adjustments early.

The sooner you review what is happening in your business, the more options you have. And the more clarity you have around your cash flow, the more confidently you can move into EOFY.

At Lemonade Beach, we help business owners make sense of their numbers and take a more proactive approach to cash flow, tax and business planning. If you want to head into EOFY feeling more prepared, now is the perfect time to start.

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