Small residual balances often look harmless, but they can make open item reviews and reconciliations much harder than they should be. For UK small businesses, a simple threshold and cleanup rule usually goes a long way.

What should be in place?

  • small residual balances are identified regularly
  • the business uses a practical threshold for clearing them
  • customer and supplier items are assessed with the right logic
  • the reason for the write-off is kept on file

Where do mistakes happen?

AreaTypical problem
Receivablessmall old amounts distort the real debtor position
Payablestiny differences slow down supplier reviews for no real gain
Reportingopen item lists become noisy and less useful

A practical routine

  1. Use Aged receivables review and Supplier statement reconciliation to identify balances that are no longer practically useful.
  2. Check first whether the difference should actually be resolved through Correcting journals and reclassifications .
  3. Record the reason for the write-off in Close file for month-end and year-end , so the decision stays traceable.
  4. Keep the rule consistent with Payment terms and credit policy , so similar cases are treated the same way.

In summary

Clearing small balances is not just cosmetic. It keeps reconciliations, debtor reviews and supplier controls focused on what still matters.