The process of finalizing all financial transactions, adjustments, and reports at the end of a fiscal year to prepare annual financial statements.
Year-End Closing (also called Annual Closing or Books Closing) involves completing all accounting activities to produce final financial statements for the fiscal year. Key steps: record all pending transactions, make adjusting entries (accruals, prepayments, provisions), perform reconciliations (bank, inter-company, GST), depreciate assets, value inventory, calculate tax provisions, close temporary accounts (revenue/expenses to P&L, P&L to Retained Earnings), and prepare Trial Balance leading to Balance Sheet and P&L. For companies, this must be completed before the statutory audit begins. Good year-end closing typically takes 7–15 working days for well-organized businesses.
March 31 Year-End Checklist: ✓ Bank reconciliation (all 4 accounts matched), ✓ AR/AP confirmation letters sent and reconciled, ✓ Physical inventory count done (March 29 — valued at ₹45,00,000), ✓ Depreciation calculated (₹8,00,000 total), ✓ Prepaid expenses adjusted (₹2,00,000 insurance), ✓ Accrued expenses recorded (₹3,50,000 salaries), ✓ Tax provision computed (₹12,00,000), ✓ Bad debt review (₹1,50,000 provision), ✓ Final TB prepared — ready for auditor.
Ensures accurate financial reporting and record-keeping
Helps maintain regulatory and tax compliance
Enables better-informed business decisions
Improves operational efficiency and cash flow management
Soft Close (monthly): Quick estimates and accruals to produce management accounts within 5–7 days. Some adjustments are estimates. Purpose: internal decision-making. Hard Close (year-end): Precise calculations, complete reconciliations, audit-ready entries. Every number must be accurate and supportable. Purpose: statutory reporting, tax filing, audit.
Fiscal year ends: March 31. Books closure: April 1–15 (all entries recorded). Draft financials: April 15–30. Tax provision finalization: May. Statutory audit: May–June. AGM and filing: September 30 deadline. Advance tax payments: March 15 (last instalment). GST annual return (GSTR-9): December 31 of following year.
Journal entries made at the end of an accounting period to transfer balances of temporary accounts (revenue, expenses) to permanent accounts (retained earnings).
A report listing the closing balances of all general ledger accounts at a specific date, used to verify that total debits equal total credits.
A 12-month period used by businesses and governments for financial reporting, budgeting, and tax purposes, which may differ from the calendar year.
Formal records of a business's financial activities, comprising the Balance Sheet, Profit & Loss Statement, Cash Flow Statement, and Notes to Accounts.
A legally mandated examination of a company's financial statements by an independent auditor to verify they present a true and fair view.
The balance in an account at the beginning of a new accounting period, carried forward from the closing balance of the previous period.
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