Balance sheet reconciliations for small businesses
Regular balance sheet reconciliation makes both reporting and close files far more reliable.
Good balance sheet reconciliations show whether the numbers behind the profit and loss can really be trusted. For UK small businesses, they are often the fastest way to find old balances and unexplained items.
What should be in place?
- the most important balance sheet accounts are reviewed first
- each key account has a support or explanation behind it
- unresolved differences are gathered for follow-up
- the same review rhythm repeats each period
Where do mistakes happen?
| Area | Typical problem |
|---|---|
| Bank | the account looks right in total but not in detail |
| Clearing accounts | old items remain without explanation |
| Support | the reconciliation cannot be found later when someone asks for it |
A practical routine
- Start from Balance sheet review before month-end and go deeper into the accounts that trigger the most questions.
- Link bank and similar accounts back to detailed work such as Business bank account guide .
- Keep the results in Close file for month-end and year-end , so the next period inherits the work instead of repeating it.
- If an account needs cleaning before it can be trusted, use Correcting journals and reclassifications .
In summary
Balance sheet reconciliations do not need to be heavy, but they do need consistency. That consistency is what makes later reporting much more dependable.
Balance sheet accounts that need ownership
These areas usually need clear ownership, support and review at close:
- Fixed assets in the chart of accounts
- Depreciation accounts in the chart of accounts
- Inventory accounts in the chart of accounts
- Accruals and prepayments in the chart of accounts
- Loans and financing in the chart of accounts
- Interest and bank charges in the chart of accounts
- Equity and share capital in the chart of accounts
- Retained earnings in the chart of accounts
- Director and owner current accounts in the chart of accounts
- Taxes payable and provisions in the chart of accounts
Expense accounts that usually benefit from clearer separation
These cost areas often become more useful when they are split out properly:
- Marketing and advertising in the chart of accounts
- Professional fees in the chart of accounts
- Insurance in the chart of accounts
- Utilities in the chart of accounts
- Telephone and internet in the chart of accounts
- Office supplies and small equipment in the chart of accounts
- Repairs and maintenance in the chart of accounts
- Leasing accounts in the chart of accounts
- Staff expense reimbursements in the chart of accounts
- Employee advances in the chart of accounts
More accounts for commissions, financing and tax
- Sales commissions in the chart of accounts
- Commission income in the chart of accounts
- Royalty and licence income in the chart of accounts
- Royalty and licence fees in the chart of accounts
- Interest receivable in the chart of accounts
- Interest payable in the chart of accounts
- Loan arrangement fees in the chart of accounts
- Factoring and invoice finance in the chart of accounts
- Payment gateway fees in the chart of accounts
- Corporation tax expense in the chart of accounts
More accounts for customer adjustments, disposals and payroll flow
- Customer refunds payable in the chart of accounts
- Early payment discounts in the chart of accounts
- Deferred consideration in the chart of accounts
- Earn-out liabilities in the chart of accounts
- Gains on disposal of fixed assets in the chart of accounts
- Losses on disposal of fixed assets in the chart of accounts
- Insurance claim receivables in the chart of accounts
- Insurance recoveries in the chart of accounts
- Benefits in kind in the chart of accounts
- Payroll clearing accounts in the chart of accounts