Three-Account System for Self-Employed and GmbH in Germany 2026: Operating, Tax and Reserve
One business account isn't enough. The three-account system separates operating cash, tax reserve and profit — so a VAT return never surprises you again.
- Category
- Business
- Updated
- Author
- Diana
If your profit sits on the business account and 4,000 € of VAT quietly drains out of it at the end of the quarter, you don't have a money problem — you have a structure problem. The three-account system solves it. Instead of leaving everything in one business account, you split every incoming payment automatically across three accounts: operating, tax, reserve. What's left is clearly allocated — and not a single euro is money you actually owe the Finanzamt.
Why one account isn't enough
A single business account mixes three very different kinds of money:
- Operating cash — what you need to pay software, inventory, contractors and rent.
- The tax office's money — VAT collected on your invoices, future income tax prepayments, trade tax or corporate tax.
- Your profit — what's actually left to invest, distribute or set aside.
As long as everything sits in one account, VAT feels like revenue. It gets spent. Three months later the VAT assessment arrives — and the account is empty. The three-account system makes that mistake structurally impossible.
Account 1: The operating account
The operating account receives every customer payment. From there, every running expense goes out: software subscriptions, inventory, contractor payments, entertainment expenses, advertising. It's your workhorse.
For a GmbH or UG, a separate business account is mandatory anyway — the separation principle under HGB requires it, and double-entry bookkeeping would be near impossible to run cleanly without distinct accounts. For self-employed individuals it isn't strictly required by law, but every tax advisor strongly recommends it — otherwise you'll fish through 600 mixed transactions in the EÜR trying to figure out which were business.
Account 2: The tax account (15–35 % of revenue)
The moment a customer pays, you immediately move a fixed percentage to a second account — the tax account. Three rules of thumb by legal form:
- Kleinunternehmer (§ 19 UStG): set aside 15–20 % — income tax only, no VAT.
- Self-employed with 19 % VAT: 19 % for VAT + 20–25 % for income tax + possibly trade tax — roughly 35–40 % of the gross payment.
- UG/GmbH: 19 % VAT off the top, then 15 % corporate tax + 5.5 % solidarity surcharge + ~14 % trade tax on profit. Plan for roughly 30 % of net revenue.
The tax account is untouchable. You don't touch it between VAT and income-tax-prepayment deadlines. When the VAT assessment arrives, the money is there. When income-tax prepayments fall due in March, June, September or December — the money is there.
Account 3: The reserve and profit account
The third account receives a fixed monthly share of the operating surplus — typically 10–20 %. It covers three jobs:
- GmbH reserves — a UG must retain 25 % of annual profit by law until the share capital reaches 25,000 €.
- Liquidity buffer — three months of operating costs in case a client doesn't pay or projects dry up.
- Investments — new hardware, a course, a bigger software license.
This account should earn interest — a Tagesgeld account or a money market fund. It's working money, not money you touch daily.
Step by step: how to split in practice
- Open the accounts — operating (Qonto, Holvi, Kontist), tax reserve and savings (Trade Republic, DKB, Comdirect Tagesgeld).
- Set up standing orders or rules: every Friday, 30 % of the operating balance moves to the tax account, 15 % to the reserve.
- For large incoming payments (> 5,000 €), split on the same day — don't wait.
- Mark VAT deadlines in the calendar: the 10th of the following month or quarter. Transfer from the tax account.
- Review your BWA quarterly and adjust the percentages if your actual tax load deviates.
How to automate it with Norman
Three accounts means three bank feeds, three statements, three times the manual reconciliation — if you do it by hand. Norman imports all your accounts in parallel, classifies every transaction automatically (tax transfer, operating expense, reserve transfer) and shows you in real time whether your tax reserve covers your current VAT liability.
For a GmbH or UG, Norman's AI bookkeeping also handles double-entry bookkeeping and the VAT return — no more manual journal entries. For self-employed users the same setup runs through the EÜR. Invoicing and bookkeeping are free; the tax filing goes directly from Norman to the Finanzamt.
Conclusion
The three-account system isn't a complexity exercise — it's the simplest way to never be surprised by a VAT return again. Operating money stays operating. Tax money stays tax money. Profit stays profit. If you set it up today it takes an hour — and likely saves you a sleepless night before year-end. Combined with honest liquidity planning and a solid DIY bookkeeping routine, you control your cash — not the other way around.
Norman handles the operational finance work behind the scenes
From invoicing to bookkeeping, Norman keeps recurring finance work organized so you can stay on top of deadlines with less manual effort.