Accounts Payable (AP) is a high-risk but often neglected area in year-end closure.Improper AP closing leads to overstated profits, GST and TDS mismatches, and additions under income-tax—especially relating to cessation of liability.
This guide explains how to close payables correctly at year-end, the controls required, and the key audit and tax risks involved.
1. Introduction — Why AP Closing Is Critical
Trade payables represent expenses already incurred but not yet paid.Any weakness in AP closing directly affects:
Accuracy of expenses
Profit measurement
GST ITC eligibility
TDS compliance
Balance sheet credibility
Weak AP closing often results in inflated profits and disallowance of expenses during assessment.
2. Objective
To ensure that at year-end:
All genuine liabilities are recorded
Expenses are not understated
Old and non-genuine payables are identified
GST and TDS compliances are aligned
Payable balances are defensible during audit and scrutiny
3. What Constitutes Proper AP Closing?
Proper AP closing ensures that:
All vendor invoices relating to the year are booked
Accrued expenses are recognised where invoices are pending
Advances to vendors are not netted off improperly
Old balances are reviewed and explained
Statutory implications are correctly addressed
AP closing is about existence, completeness, and obligation.
4. CABTA Framework — “The 7-Step AP Closing Process”
Step 1 — Vendor Invoice Completeness Check
Verify that:
All invoices up to 31 March are received or accounted for
GRN / service completion records are matched
No April invoices relating to March are missed
Unbooked invoices lead to expense understatement.
Missing expenses artificially inflate profit and attract scrutiny.
Step 2 — Expense Cut-Off Validation
Ensure:
Expenses are booked in the correct year
Payments are not the basis for booking
Accrued expenses are recognised
Example:
Professional fees for March billed in April → accrue in March
Step 3 — Vendor Ledger Reconciliation
For major vendors:
Match invoices, payments, and balances
Identify differences
Clear mismatches before finalisation
Unreconciled vendor balances are audit red flags.
Step 4 — Review Advances to Vendors
Vendor advances should:
Be shown separately as assets
Not be adjusted against payables unless settled
Long-pending advances require explanation.
Incorrect netting hides true liability and weakens balance sheet credibility.
Step 5 — Ageing Analysis of Payables
Prepare ageing buckets:
0–90 days
91–180 days
181–365 days
365 days
Review:
Old unpaid balances
Dormant vendors
Credit balances without movement
Old payables without explanation invite Section 41(1) enquiries.
Step 6 — GST & TDS Validation
Verify for each payable:
GST ITC eligibility
Reflection in GSTR-2B
TDS applicability and deduction
Ensure:
GST is not expensed
TDS is not missed or netted
Failure here leads to dual exposure.
Step 7 — Balance Confirmations & Documentation
For material vendors:
Obtain confirmations
Maintain reconciliation workings
Confirmations significantly reduce audit and assessment risk.
Absence of confirmations shifts burden of proof to the assessee.
5. Income-Tax Risks in AP Closing
Tax authorities commonly examine:
Old outstanding creditors
Creditors without transactions
Unpaid liabilities carried for years
These may trigger:
Disallowance of expenses
Addition u/s 41(1) (cessation of liability)
Rejection of books
6. GST Risks in AP Closing
ITC claimed without invoice or 2B reflection
RCM liabilities missed
Vendor GSTIN inactive or cancelled
AP closing must be aligned with GST reconciliation.
7. Common AP Closing Mistakes in SMEs
Booking expenses only on payment
Ignoring accrued expenses
Not ageing payables
No vendor reconciliation
Missing TDS deductions
Not reviewing old balances
These mistakes convert payables into future tax additions.
8. Case Example — Avoiding Section 41(1) Addition
Issue:Client had ₹2.4 crore of old trade payables outstanding for over 3 years.
CABTA Action:
Vendor-wise ageing analysis
Obtained confirmations
Linked balances to ongoing business relationship
Outcome:
No cessation of liability assumed
No income addition
9. Tools & Templates (Application Layer)
AP Ageing Report
Vendor Reconciliation Format
Accrued Expense Register
Vendor Confirmation Template
AP Closing Checklist
(Available on request.)
10. CABTA Insight
“Unverified payables are treated as income in the eyes of tax authorities.”