A disciplined year-end close is not achieved by working harder in March or April—it is achieved by working earlier and in phases.Most delays, audit stress, and compliance lapses arise because SMEs attempt to close the year without a structured timeline.
This guide explains how to execute a 30 / 60 / 90 day year-end closure plan that ensures accuracy, compliance, and audit readiness.
1. Introduction — Why a Closure Timeline Is Essential
Year-end close is a multi-dimensional exercise involving accounting, taxation, documentation, and review.Trying to complete everything at once leads to:
Missed accruals
Poor reconciliations
Excessive last-minute journal entries
Audit delays
Increased tax risk
Absence of a structured close timeline is one of the biggest causes of prolonged audits and post-filing litigation.
2. Objective
To provide a practical, phase-wise timeline that helps accounting teams:
Spread year-end work logically
Prioritise high-risk activities
Avoid last-minute pressure
Improve quality of financials
Reduce audit and compliance friction
3. The Concept of Phased Year-End Closing
A mature year-end close is executed in three distinct phases:
First 30 days: Clean-up and capture
Next 30 days: Validation and adjustments
Final 30 days: Review, documentation, and finalisation
Each phase has a specific purpose and should not be mixed.
4. CABTA Framework — “The 30 / 60 / 90 Day Close Model”
Phase 1 — First 30 Days (Day 1 to Day 30)
Focus: Completeness & Clean-Up
This phase begins immediately after financial year-end.
Key Activities
Freeze posting cut-off
Complete bank & cash reconciliations
Close vendor and customer ledgers
Identify missing invoices
Record routine accruals
Clear obvious suspense balances
Deliverables
Clean preliminary Trial Balance
Updated reconciliations
List of pending items
Errors not identified in this phase become difficult to correct later.
Phase 2 — Next 30 Days (Day 31 to Day 60)
Focus: Accuracy & Adjustments
This is the most critical technical phase.
Key Activities
Accruals and prepaids finalisation
Provisions (bonus, audit fees, doubtful debts)
Fixed asset review & depreciation
Inventory verification and valuation
GST reconciliation (books vs returns)
TDS reconciliation and corrections
Deliverables
Adjusted Trial Balance
Final P&L draft
Draft Balance Sheet
Statutory reconciliation statements
Most audit qualifications originate from weaknesses in this phase.
Phase 3 — Final 30 Days (Day 61 to Day 90)
Focus: Review, Documentation & Finalisation
This phase prepares the books for external scrutiny.
Key Activities
Trial Balance review
P&L trend and red-flag analysis
Balance Sheet risk review
Cash flow statement preparation
Collection of confirmations
Preparation of audit schedules
Management review and approval
Deliverables
Final financial statements
Complete audit file
Management-approved numbers
Strong review in this phase dramatically reduces audit queries and tax exposure.
5. What Happens When Phases Are Mixed
Common SME mistakes:
Passing provisions before reconciliations
Reviewing P&L before inventory valuation
Finalising statements without confirmations
Audit starting before reconciliations are complete
Impact: Phase mixing creates confusion, rework, and audit fatigue.
6. Roles & Ownership Across the Timeline
Title
Title
Title
Phase
Primary Owner
Reviewer
30 Days
Accounting Team
Finance Manager
60 Days
Finance Manager
CFO / Partner
90 Days
CFO / Partner
Management
Title
Title
Clear ownership prevents duplication and gaps.
7. Linking Timeline With Compliance Deadlines
A proper close timeline aligns with:
GST annual return preparation
Tax audit timelines
Income-tax return filing
Bank and investor reporting
Delayed close compresses compliance windows and increases error risk.
8. Early Warning Signs of Timeline Failure
Reconciliations pending beyond 30 days
Repeated reopening of closed ledgers
Excessive “adjustment” journals
Audit starting without final TB
Management seeing multiple profit numbers
These signs indicate loss of control over the close process.
9. Case Example — Reducing Audit Time by 40%
Issue:Audit stretched over 3 months with repeated data requests.
CABTA Intervention:
Implemented 30/60/90 close plan
Assigned phase-wise ownership
Locked each phase before moving ahead
Outcome:
Audit completed 40% faster
Fewer audit queries
Reduced partner involvement time
10. Tools & Templates (Application Layer)
Year-End Close Calendar
Phase-wise Checklist
Responsibility Matrix
Pending Items Tracker
Review Sign-off Format
(Available on request.)
11. CABTA Insight
“A structured timeline converts year-end close from chaos into control.”