Writing
A Monthly Close Rhythm That Holds Under Audit Pressure
A three-week month-end close cadence with reconciliation standards, variance review, and Utah sales tax tie-out for businesses without a controller.
This describes operational bookkeeping practice, not accounting standards pronouncements or tax positions. Adapt materiality thresholds and timelines to your industry, lender covenants, and reporting obligations.
Why “close” is a control, not a report
Month-end closing is often described as producing financial statements. That description puts the output before the process. A close rhythm is a control system: fixed tasks, assigned owners, documented exceptions, and evidence that the general ledger agrees with external records.
Without that system, the P&L becomes a narrative the owner believes rather than a reconciled record. Sales tax returns drift from POS data. Payroll liabilities on the balance sheet do not match Form 941 totals. Lenders and buyers discover the gap during diligence—not during routine management review.
For businesses without a full-time controller, the goal is a repeatable close within 10–15 business days of month end. If your close routinely takes longer, transactions are probably not being recorded during the month.
Define materiality before you start
Materiality is not a single number in the Code—it is a judgment about what misstatement would change a management decision. For a $2M revenue service business, a $500 misclassification may be immaterial; for a $200K nonprofit with tight grant covenants, the same error may not be.
Set explicit thresholds in writing:
| Category | Example threshold | Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Bank/credit card transactions | Under $50 | May use a standard expense account if reviewed monthly |
| Accrual estimates | Under $500 or 1% of monthly revenue | May skip formal accrual if immaterial and non-recurring |
| Balance sheet reconciling items | Any amount over $100 | Must be investigated and cleared or documented |
The three-week cadence
| Week | Focus | Primary outputs |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 (business days 1–5) | Reconcile and classify | Bank/CC reconciliations; cleared uncategorized items; payroll posted; sales tax collected recorded |
| Week 2 (business days 6–10) | Review and adjust | Balance sheet review; accruals and prepaids updated; AR/AP aging reviewed; intercompany cleared |
| Week 3 (business days 11–15) | Report, verify filings, summarize | P&L variance notes; deposit/filing tie-outs; management summary; close sign-off |
Week 1: Reconcile and classify
Days 1–5 after month end
- Reconcile every bank and credit card account through the statement end date; no outstanding items older than 60 days without documented reason
- Clear uncategorized transactions; investigate any item over your materiality threshold
- Post payroll entries and tie gross wages, employer taxes, and net pay to the provider journal report
- Record sales tax collected; confirm POS or invoicing system totals match the liability account
- Verify merchant processor deposits tie to bank deposits (Stripe, Square, Shopify Payments)
- Record loan payments with correct principal/interest split per amortization schedule
Common GL issues at this stage: duplicate entries from bank feeds importing cleared transactions; timing differences between accrual revenue and cash deposits; payroll accruals when the pay period crosses month end; credit card payments recorded as expenses instead of balance sheet transfers.
Week 2: Review and adjust
Days 6–10
- Review balance sheet accounts with stale balances, negative asset balances, or unexplained swings
- Update prepaid expenses, accruals, and depreciation per fixed asset schedule
- Clear intercompany or due-to/due-from balances; document any intentional balances
- Review accounts receivable aging; note uncollectible items and consider allowance adjustment
- Review accounts payable aging; confirm all vendor invoices for the period are recorded
- Reconcile inventory or WIP accounts if applicable
- Verify equity/distribution accounts reflect actual owner draws and contributions
| Account type | What to look for | Common error |
|---|---|---|
| Prepaid expenses | Balance matches future benefit; amortize monthly | Annual insurance paid in January, never amortized |
| Fixed assets | New purchases capitalized; disposals removed; depreciation current | Equipment under capitalization threshold expensed inconsistently |
| Payroll liabilities | Tie to provider reports; clear stale balances | Prior-year overpayment sitting in liability account |
| Sales tax payable | Matches filed returns or payment schedule | Filed from bank deposits instead of sales system |
| Loan balances | Tie to lender statement | Interest expensed but principal not reduced |
Week 3: Report, verify, and summarize
Days 11–15
- Review P&L against budget or trailing 3-month average; document variances over 10% with causes
- Verify sales tax and payroll deposits match what was filed or is due before the next deadline
- Confirm Utah TC-941E and federal Form 941 deposit schedules are current if you file in-house
- Write a short management summary: revenue, major expense variances, cash position, and decisions needed
- Export and back up the accounting file; store off-site or in a separate cloud account
- Sign and date the close checklist; store with monthly financials
The management summary should fit on one page: period, revenue with trend, gross margin, major variances with causes, cash position, trust-fund liabilities due, and decisions needed. “Lower revenue” is not a variance explanation; “Q2 campaign ended; organic traffic down 12% MoM” is.
Cash basis versus accrual: close differences
Cash basis taxpayers generally recognize income when received and expenses when paid. Month-end focus: verify all disbursements are recorded, outstanding checks are listed, and deposits in transit are not double-counted.
Accrual basis taxpayers recognize income when earned and expenses when incurred. Month-end focus intensifies on unbilled revenue, accrued liabilities, and cutoff testing—confirm services billed in January for December work are excluded from December revenue. IRC § 446 requires consistent application; switching treatment without IRS consent is not permitted.
Job costing and class tracking
Contractors, agencies, and professional services firms should close by job or class:
- Revenue per job tied to signed contracts or milestone documentation
- Direct costs posted to the same job code
- WIP review for long-term projects
- Overhead allocation applied consistently—changing allocation bases quarterly distorts profitability
Week 2 should include a job profitability summary flagging negative gross margin or costs exceeding budget by more than 10%.
Key metrics to produce at close
| Metric | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Cash runway (cash ÷ trailing 3-month average burn) | Survives payroll and tax deposits if revenue dips |
| Days sales outstanding | Collection problems surface before cash crisis |
| Gross margin % by product or service line | Pricing and COGS errors show here first |
| Payroll as % of revenue | Labor cost creep is gradual; monthly view catches it |
| Sales tax payable ÷ taxable sales | Misconfigured POS tax codes create drift |
A spreadsheet fed from the GL export is sufficient for businesses under $5M revenue.
Tooling and ownership
- Consistent chart of accounts — do not rename accounts every quarter
- Source document attachment — receipts and invoices linked to transactions
- Recurring calendar blocks — close work is scheduled, not overflow
- Single close owner — one person drives the checklist; others provide inputs by fixed deadlines
Common failure points
Mixing personal and business expenses without a reimbursement process. Waiting until year-end to fix misclassified transactions—a contractor coded as rent for nine months creates a 1099 problem. No backup of the accounting file. Sales tax filed from bank deposits instead of the sales system. Skipping the management summary because “the client doesn’t read it”—the forced clarity still matters.
Connecting close to tax and compliance
A disciplined close produces data tax preparers need without emergency reconstruction:
- Schedule C or Form 1065/1120-S tie to book income with a documented book-to-tax adjustment schedule
- Payroll tax returns reconcile to W-2 totals and GL wages
- Sales tax returns reconcile to recorded collected tax
- Fixed asset schedules agree to the balance sheet and depreciation expense
When an IRS or Utah State Tax Commission examination begins, the first requests are usually bank statements, general ledger detail, and reconciliation workpapers. A monthly close that produces those artifacts is examination-ready by default.
Closing perspective
A monthly close rhythm is operational infrastructure, not overhead. Reconcile, adjust, report, sign off—the cadence is intentionally boring. Boring closes compound into reliable financials, faster lending decisions, and lower professional fees at year-end because the hard work already happened twelve times.
Related: payroll compliance · IRS record retention