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The Complete Year-End Closing Checklist for Canadian Businesses

Don’t miss critical steps. This checklist covers account reconciliation, adjusting entries, and documentation requirements before audit begins.

15 min read Beginner February 2026
Accountant organizing year-end closing checklist with various documents and audit preparation materials spread across desk

Why Year-End Closing Matters

Year-end closing isn’t just a compliance box to check. It’s where you get a real picture of your business’s financial health. When you properly close the books, you’re setting up clean records for auditors, lenders, and stakeholders. You’ll catch errors before they become problems, ensure revenue and expenses hit the right periods, and actually know what your profit margin looks like.

Most businesses rush through this process. We’ve seen it—companies skip reconciliations, leave adjusting entries incomplete, or can’t find documents when auditors ask. That’s when closing becomes stressful instead of straightforward. We’re going to walk you through every step so you don’t end up there.

What You’ll Learn

  • Step-by-step account reconciliation process
  • How to handle adjusting entries correctly
  • Accruals, deferrals, and timing adjustments
  • Documentation auditors actually need
  • Timeline and deadlines for Canadian businesses

Account Reconciliation: Your Foundation

Before you touch adjusting entries, reconcile everything. This means comparing your accounting records to bank statements, credit card statements, and loan documents. You’re looking for timing differences and errors—cheques that cleared later than expected, deposits not yet recorded, or charges you missed.

Start with your bank account. Get the December 31st bank statement and match every transaction to your books. Create a formal bank reconciliation showing opening balance, additions, subtractions, and ending balance. It should match your general ledger to the penny. This usually takes 2-4 hours depending on transaction volume.

Then move to accounts receivable and accounts payable. Reconcile your subledgers to the general ledger. Print an aging schedule for receivables—you’ll need this for auditors anyway, and it helps you spot uncollectable accounts. For payables, confirm you’ve recorded all vendor invoices received by year-end, even if you haven’t paid them yet.

Detailed accounting spreadsheet showing bank reconciliation with matching entries highlighted and organized columns
Accountant's notebook with detailed adjusting entry examples and accrual calculations written out clearly

Adjusting Entries: The Heart of Closing

Adjusting entries capture revenue and expenses in the right period. Without them, your financial statements don’t reflect reality. You’ll miss revenue earned but not yet invoiced, or record expenses from the next year in this year’s numbers.

Common adjustments include accrued salaries (if you pay bi-weekly but year-end falls mid-pay period), accrued interest on loans, prepaid insurance that needs to be expensed monthly, and revenue received in advance. You’re matching economic activity to the period it actually happened.

Document every entry. Write down why you’re making the adjustment, the amounts, and which accounts are affected. Create a separate schedule showing all adjustments—this becomes part of your working papers that auditors will review. We recommend using a standard template so adjustments are consistent and traceable.

Accruals and Deferrals: Getting Timing Right

These two concepts trip up a lot of business owners. Here’s the simple version: accruals are expenses or revenues you owe or are owed but haven’t paid or invoiced yet. Deferrals are the opposite—you’ve received or paid cash but haven’t earned or incurred the expense yet.

Accrued Revenue

You’ve completed work or delivered goods but haven’t invoiced the client yet. Example: you billed a project on January 3rd for December work. You need to accrue that revenue in December, not January. Record the debit to accounts receivable and credit to revenue.

Accrued Expenses

You’ve incurred costs but haven’t paid the vendor yet. Common examples: utilities used but not billed, contractor invoices received in January for December work, property tax assessments for the year. Debit the expense account, credit accounts payable.

Deferred Income

A customer paid you for something you haven’t delivered yet. Like annual subscription fees or retainers paid upfront. You’ve received the cash but not earned the revenue. It sits in deferred revenue liability until you fulfill the obligation.

Prepaid Expenses

You’ve paid for something you’ll use over time. Annual insurance, rent paid in advance, office supplies bought in bulk. You record it as an asset first, then expense it as you use it. At year-end, adjust for the portion that applies to this year only.

Documentation: Audit-Ready Records

When auditors show up, they’ll ask for specific documents. Have them organized before they arrive. We’re talking about bank statements, loan agreements, lease contracts, invoices for large purchases, payroll records, and expense documentation. Create a checklist and assign someone to gather everything by December 20th.

For adjusting entries, keep a working paper showing the entry, explanation, and source documents. If you accrued contractor fees, attach the email or invoice. If you recorded a utility expense, include the estimate or bill. This shows auditors you’ve got a solid process, not just guesses.

Also document any significant transactions or unusual items. Major equipment purchases, related-party transactions, changes in accounting policies, or significant write-offs. A brief memo explaining the business purpose goes a long way. Auditors are essentially asking “does this make sense?” Make sure it does.

Organized filing system with labeled folders and documents neatly arranged showing audit-ready documentation

Your Year-End Closing Checklist

Here’s a practical checklist you can print and use. Assign tasks to team members and track completion. Most businesses complete this between December 15th and January 31st, depending on complexity.

01

Bank and Cash Reconciliation

Reconcile all bank accounts, credit cards, and cash to the general ledger. Investigate outstanding cheques and deposits in transit. Complete by December 20th.

02

Accounts Receivable Review

Prepare an aging schedule. Identify uncollectable accounts and create an allowance for doubtful accounts. Ensure all December invoices are recorded.

03

Accounts Payable Review

Reconcile vendor statements. Record all invoices received by year-end, even if unpaid. Check for unrecorded expenses and commitments.

04

Inventory Count and Valuation

If you carry inventory, do a physical count on or near December 31st. Compare to your records and adjust for obsolescence. This is mandatory for accurate cost of goods sold.

05

Fixed Asset Review

Verify asset additions and disposals. Calculate depreciation for the full year. Document any write-offs or impairments. Ensure you’ve recorded all acquisitions.

06

Adjusting Entries and Accruals

Record all accrued revenues, accrued expenses, deferred income, and prepaid expenses. Create supporting documentation for each entry. This is where most errors happen—take your time.

07

Trial Balance and GL Review

Print a trial balance. Verify debits equal credits. Review for unusual balances, particularly zero-balance accounts that should have activity or high-balance accounts that look wrong.

08

Document Collection

Gather all bank statements, loan agreements, lease contracts, significant invoices, payroll records, and minutes from board meetings. Organize in a folder for auditors.

Recommended Timeline

Spread the work over a few weeks. This prevents last-minute panic and gives you time to catch errors.

Timeline calendar showing year-end closing tasks distributed from December 15 through January 31

December 15-20

Start reconciliations. Get bank statements, credit card statements, and vendor statements. Begin preliminary reviews of accounts receivable and payable.

December 20-27

Complete physical inventory count. Finalize reconciliations. Review fixed assets. Start documenting adjusting entries. This is your most intensive period.

December 28-31

Record all adjusting entries. Review trial balance. Make final corrections. Gather documentation. Have everything ready for your accountant or auditor by January 5th.

January 1-31

Work with your accountant to finalize financial statements. Reverse temporary accounts. Address any audit questions. You’ve got time—don’t rush it.

Practical Tips to Avoid Common Mistakes

We’ve seen these errors cost businesses time and money. Here’s how to sidestep them.

Document Everything

Don’t rely on memory. Write down why you’re making adjustments, attach supporting documents, and keep a record. Your future self will thank you, and auditors will appreciate it.

Don’t Skip Reconciliations

A one-cent difference ignored becomes a five-hundred-dollar problem. Reconcile everything to the penny. If you can’t find an error, flag it and move forward—auditors will help you track it down.

Use Consistent Policies

If you changed how you record something mid-year, document it. Auditors want consistency. If you’ve got a legitimate reason for a change, write it down and explain it.

Review Before You Submit

Print your trial balance. Look at it with fresh eyes. Does accounts receivable seem too high? Is depreciation expense reasonable? These visual checks catch obvious errors quickly.

Ready to Close Your Books?

Year-end closing doesn’t have to be overwhelming. You’ve got a checklist, you understand the key concepts, and you know the timeline. The main thing is starting early and being thorough. Reconcile everything, document your adjustments, and gather your supporting materials. That’s 90% of the battle.

If you’re working with an accountant or auditor, they’re there to help. Give them clean records and clear documentation, and the audit will go smoothly. They’ll catch things you missed, and that’s what you’re paying for. Your job is to be organized and honest about the numbers.

Don’t rush this process. You’ll catch errors now instead of discovering them months later when they’re harder to fix. And when you hand auditors organized, well-documented records, you’ll look like a pro who takes financial management seriously.

Important Disclaimer

This guide is for educational purposes and provides general information about year-end closing procedures. It isn’t professional accounting or tax advice. Every business’s situation is unique, and accounting standards may apply differently to your specific circumstances. We strongly recommend working with a qualified accountant or bookkeeper to ensure your closing procedures comply with Canadian GAAP and your tax obligations. If you’re uncertain about any adjusting entries or procedures, consult with your accounting professional before implementing changes.