A strong close file is not about storing more paperwork. For UK small businesses, it is about keeping the key reconciliations, explanations and outstanding points in one place so the numbers can still be understood later.

What should be in place?

  • key reconciliations are grouped together
  • material judgements and explanations are written down
  • the latest version is easy to find
  • open points are visible before the close is signed off

Where do mistakes happen?

AreaTypical problem
Version controlmultiple files exist with no clear final version
Explanationbalances cannot be explained later when reviewed
Continuitythe next close starts without using the previous notes

A practical routine

  1. Use Balance sheet review before month-end as the minimum list of what must be included each time.
  2. Point bank, debtors, creditors and period-end adjustments back to their own support.
  3. Build the file around Record keeping tips and your main reconciliations so the evidence stays close to the numbers.
  4. Finish with a short handover note on what still needs watching next month.

In summary

A good close file saves time later. It makes review easier, explanations clearer and the next close less dependent on memory.