8. Bank Reconciliation — Final Year-End Procedures

Bank and cash balances are the first line of scrutiny in audit and income-tax proceedings.Almost every assessment begins with bank statements, not with the Profit & Loss account.
This guide explains how to perform year-end bank and cash reconciliation properly, what controls are expected, and which red flags trigger audit and tax enquiries.

1. Introduction — Why Bank & Cash Closing Is High-Risk

Bank and cash balances directly impact:
  • Sections 68 / 69 / 69A exposure
  • Credibility of financial statements
  • Cash flow interpretation
  • Audit risk profiling
Even small mismatches can escalate into unexplained income allegations.
Weak bank or cash reconciliation is one of the fastest ways to invite scrutiny notices.

2. Objective

To ensure that at year-end:
  • All bank balances are fully reconciled
  • Cash balance is accurate and reasonable
  • Unidentified credits/debits are resolved
  • Supporting documentation is complete
  • No exposure exists under unexplained money provisions

3. What Constitutes Proper Bank & Cash Closing?

Proper closing ensures that:
  • Book balances match actual bank balances
  • Timing differences are clearly identified
  • No unexplained entries remain
  • Cash balance reflects physical reality
Bank and cash ledgers must pass the existence, accuracy, and completeness test.

4. CABTA Framework — “The 7-Step Bank & Cash Closing Process”

Step 1 — Bank Statement Completeness Check

Ensure:
  • All bank accounts are identified
  • Statements up to 31 March are obtained
  • No dormant or forgotten accounts exist
Undisclosed bank accounts are treated as concealment risk.

Step 2 — Prepare Bank Reconciliation Statements (BRS)

For each bank account, reconcile:
  • Book balance
  • Bank statement balance
Common reconciling items:
  • Cheques issued but not presented
  • Cheques deposited but not credited
  • Bank charges
  • Interest credits
  • Auto-debits
Unreconciled BRS is unacceptable at year-end.

Step 3 — Investigate Unidentified Credits & Debits

Any entry not explained by business activity must be investigated.
Examples:
  • Unknown credits
  • Auto-debits without narration
  • Payment gateway settlements
  • Charges without invoices
Unidentified bank credits are prime candidates for Section 68 additions.

Step 4 — Cash Balance Verification

Cash closing requires:
  • Physical cash count as on 31 March
  • Matching physical cash with books
  • Investigation of differences
Red flags:
  • Negative cash balance
  • Excessive cash balance
  • Cash balance disproportionate to turnover
Unrealistic cash balances invite additions under Sections 69 / 69A.

Step 5 — Review Cash Transactions Pattern

Analyse:
  • High-value cash transactions
  • Repetitive round-figure withdrawals
  • Frequent cash deposits
  • Cash expenses near year-end
Cash pattern analysis is heavily relied upon in assessments.

Step 6 — Link Bank & Cash With Other Ledgers

Ensure consistency with:
  • Debtors and creditors
  • Loan repayments
  • Capital introduction
  • GST payments
  • TDS payments
Mismatch indicates hidden errors or omissions.

Step 7 — Documentation & Sign-Off

Maintain:
  • Bank Reconciliation Statements
  • Cash count sheet
  • Explanation notes for differences
  • Reviewer sign-off
Without documentation, reconciliation has no evidentiary value.

5. Common Red Flags in Bank & Cash Closing

  • Old unreconciled items
  • Suspense balances routed through bank
  • Cash deposited without source explanation
  • Personal transactions in business bank
  • No physical cash verification
These red flags almost always escalate scrutiny depth.

6. Audit Perspective on Bank & Cash

Auditors verify:
  • BRS accuracy
  • Ageing of reconciling items
  • Cash verification records
  • Consistency with cash flow statement
Weakness here often results in qualified audit remarks.

7. Income-Tax Perspective

Assessing Officers focus on:
  • Source of bank credits
  • Cash deposits
  • Inter-account transfers
  • Loan and capital receipts
Bank reconciliation is the starting defence document.

8. Case Example — Defending Cash Deposits

Issue:AO questioned ₹1.6 crore cash deposits as unexplained.
CABTA Action:
  • Produced BRS and cash flow trail
  • Linked deposits with withdrawals and sales
  • Provided reconciliation and explanations
Outcome:
  • No addition made
  • Cash deposits accepted as explained

9. Tools & Templates (Application Layer)

  • Bank Reconciliation Format
  • Cash Count Sheet
  • Unidentified Credit Tracker
  • Monthly BRS Checklist
  • Year-End Bank Closing SOP

10. CABTA Insight

“If bank and cash are clean, half the assessment battle is already won.”

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