Understanding Adjusting Entries and Why They Matter
Learn how adjusting entries capture revenues and expenses in the correct period, ensuring your financial statements reflect reality.
Read ArticleOrganize your records now. We detail which documents auditors request, how to structure your files, and what happens when information’s missing.
Here’s the thing—auditors don’t just show up and ask questions. They want to SEE your records. Bank statements, invoices, ledgers, journal entries, contracts. Everything that proves your numbers add up.
When your documentation’s organized and complete, the audit moves faster. You’ll spend less time hunting for receipts and more time on actual business. Missing records? That’s when things get complicated. Auditors have to dig deeper, ask more questions, and sometimes they can’t verify transactions at all.
We’re going to walk through exactly what auditors need, how to organize it, and what gaps cost you most.
Most audits focus on these eight categories. Don’t have them organized? That’s your biggest risk.
Monthly statements from all accounts plus your bank reconciliation showing how your records match the bank’s records. Missing reconciliations? Auditors will request them.
Every transaction over a certain threshold (usually $5,000+) needs supporting documentation. Invoices, purchase orders, receiving reports, credit card statements.
Your complete chart of accounts, monthly general ledgers, and year-end trial balance. This is the backbone of everything. Auditors start here.
Every journal entry adjusting revenue, expenses, or account balances needs explanation. Accruals, deferrals, depreciation—all documented with the why behind each entry.
Loan agreements, leases, employment contracts, customer contracts—anything affecting your financial position. Auditors verify terms match how you’ve recorded them.
Payroll registers, T4 summaries, CRA remittance receipts, pension contributions. Auditors verify employee expenses and tax compliance.
If you hold inventory, auditors need inventory counts, aging reports, and valuation methods. Physical counts supporting year-end balances are critical.
A complete list of assets, acquisition dates, costs, accumulated depreciation, and disposal records. Auditors verify amounts match your balance sheet.
Organization isn’t about being neat. It’s about speed. When your auditor asks for “Q3 expense reconciliations,” you need to find them in seconds, not hours.
Most successful organizations use a folder structure organized by month or quarter, with subfolders for document type. So January might contain: Bank Statements, Invoices, Payroll, Adjusting Entries. Simple, logical, consistent.
Digital organization matters most now. Whether you’re using cloud storage (Google Drive, OneDrive) or accounting software (QuickBooks, Xero), you need naming conventions everyone follows. “Jan Invoice” isn’t helpful. “2026-01-Invoice-Acme-Corp-5000” tells auditors everything.
Keep originals accessible. Some documents you’ll have physically (signed contracts, bank statements you printed). Don’t lock these away. Give your auditor access to your document storage from day one.
It’s not just inconvenient. Missing documentation creates audit issues that affect your final report.
First, they’ll ask you to find the missing documents. You’ve got time to search. But this eats hours—hours you’re paying for audit time. Sometimes documents truly don’t exist.
Without supporting docs, auditors use alternative procedures. They might confirm transactions directly with customers, banks, or vendors. This takes longer and costs more.
If auditors can’t verify a significant transaction or balance, they might qualify their opinion. A “qualified” audit report signals to lenders, investors, and regulators that something couldn’t be verified.
More procedures = more hours = higher costs. Missing documentation can add 10-20% to your audit bill. That’s real money you could’ve avoided with better organization upfront.
Run through this 30 days before your audit starts. It won’t take long, and you’ll sleep better knowing you’re prepared.
You don’t need to wait until audit season. Pick a weekend this month and organize your documents. Create your folder structure. Scan what needs scanning. Name your files consistently.
It’s maybe 4-6 hours of work upfront. But you’ll save that much time during the actual audit—and you’ll avoid the stress of scrambling to find records under pressure. Plus, you’re protecting yourself from missed documentation issues that could affect your audit report.
Clean records aren’t just about passing an audit. They’re about understanding your own business. When everything’s organized, you can see patterns, spot problems, and make better decisions. That’s the real payoff.
Check out our complete guide to year-end closing procedures and other audit preparation resources below.
Explore Year-End ResourcesThis article provides general informational guidance on audit documentation practices and organization. It’s not professional accounting or audit advice. Every business’s situation is different—document requirements vary by company size, industry, and regulatory environment.
Always consult with your qualified accountant or auditor about what specific documentation you need to prepare and maintain. They’ll advise you on your exact circumstances and any industry-specific requirements that apply to your business.