The process of reviewing, adjusting, and finalizing all financial transactions for a month to produce accurate financial statements and management reports.
Month-End Close (also called monthly closing or period-end close) is a structured process that accountants follow to ensure all transactions are properly recorded before generating monthly financial statements. Key steps include: recording all revenue and expenses for the period, posting accruals and deferrals, processing depreciation entries, reconciling bank accounts, reconciling inter-company transactions, reviewing accounts receivable and payable aging, adjusting inventory, recording tax provisions, reviewing and posting journal entries, and generating trial balance and financial statements. Best-in-class companies complete month-end close within 3–5 business days. The process ensures financial accuracy, enables timely management reporting, and maintains audit readiness throughout the year.
Month-end close checklist for April 2026: Day 1: Cut off AP/AR, record accruals. Day 2: Bank reconciliation, depreciation posting, prepaid expense amortization. Day 3: Inventory adjustment, inter-company reconciliation. Day 4: Review TB, post adjusting entries, management review. Day 5: Generate P&L, Balance Sheet, Cash Flow. Lock the period. Total: 5 working days for complete financials.
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Hard close: full month-end process with all adjustments, accruals, reconciliations — produces audit-quality financials. Done quarterly or at year-end. Soft close: abbreviated process with key adjustments only — produces management-quality financials with acceptable approximations. Done for interim months to save time.
Automate bank reconciliation and recurring journals, use ERP with auto-posting rules, maintain a closing checklist with assigned owners and deadlines, move tasks to during-the-month (continuous accounting), implement real-time expense tracking, and standardize chart of accounts across entities.
Journal entries made at the end of an accounting period to transfer balances of temporary accounts (revenue, expenses) to permanent accounts (retained earnings).
The process of comparing two sets of records to ensure they agree and identify any discrepancies, most commonly matching internal accounting records with bank statements.
A report listing the closing balances of all general ledger accounts at a specific date, used to verify that total debits equal total credits.
Formal records of a business's financial activities, comprising the Balance Sheet, Profit & Loss Statement, Cash Flow Statement, and Notes to Accounts.
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