Year-end can feel overwhelming for small and medium-sized businesses across Canada. Between vendor payments, payroll adjustments, inventory updates, and tax deadlines, it’s easy for financial operations to fall behind. But the businesses that close their month — and their year — cleanly and consistently tend to follow one core principle:

A predictable workflow beats a heroic sprint.

At Transcounts, we use a Day-5 ⇒ Day-15month-end approach to help Canadian businesses stay organized, aligned, and ready for year-end — without last-minute chaos. Below is a practical checklist you can use to wrap up your financial year with clarity and confidence.

1. Get Your Books Caught Up Before December 31st

Every strong year-end close starts with having every month before December fully completed. That means all:

  • Bank and credit-card accounts are reconciled
  • Vendor bills are entered and matched
  • Customer invoices are posted and collected where possible
  • Payroll entries are reflected accurately
  • Adjustments and corrections are finalized

If you’re starting December with old months still open, year-end will be slower, costlier, and more error-prone.

2. Confirm Outstanding Receivables and Payables

Before closing the year, review:

  • Open customer invoices (follow up on anything over 30 days)
  • Unpaid vendor bills
  • Unmatched deposits
  • Prepayments and credits

This ensures accurate cash-flow, working-capital reporting, and tax preparation.

3. Prepare for Payroll Year-End (T4/T4A)

January and February move quickly — and CRA deadlines don’t shift. Make sure:

  • Employee information is up to date
  • All taxable benefits are recorded
  • Bonuses and commissions are processed
  • ROEs are completed where needed
  • T4/T4A mapping is correct in payroll software

A clean December makes for a smooth February.

4. Review Vendor Contracts, Subscriptions & Renewals

Many Canadian businesses lose money to:

  • Auto-renewing SaaS tools
  • Overlapping software subscriptions
  • Outdated vendor agreements
  • Incorrect recurring billing

Year-end is the perfect time to audit recurring expenses and cancel anything that no longer aligns with your operations.

5. Validate Your Tax Liabilities

Confirm balances for:

  • GST/HST
  • PST (if applicable)
  • Employer remittances
  • Installments (corporate tax)

We document GST/HST recovery opportunities; filings happen when engaged.

Under- or over-reporting here can create penalties or unnecessary cash drag.

6. Organize Digital Documents & Audit Trail

CRA audits often hinge on whether documentation is easy to produce.
Your year-end folder should include:

  • Bank statements
  • Credit-card statements
  • Payroll summaries
  • Vendor statements
  • Loan/lease statements
  • Government correspondence
  • Corporate minute book updates

Cloud-based storage makes future audits far easier.

7. Use a Day-5 ⇒ Day-15 Cadence for January & Beyond

Instead of “catching up” all year, lock in a consistent workflow:

  • By Day 5:All inputs from your team
  • By Day 15:A complete month-end package (P&L, balance sheet, cash-flow, KPIs)

This offers better planning, fewer surprises, and less stress for owners and managers.

 

Final Thoughts

A well-executed year-end close sets the tone for a stronger, more predictable financial year. It eliminates uncertainty, reduces tax risk, and gives leaders the clarity they need to make better decisions.

If you want help implementing a cleaner, faster, more reliable monthly close, our team is here to support you with bookkeeping, payroll, AP/AR, controller services, and year-end coordination across Canada.