What Are Year-End Accounts?
A guide to year-end accounts in UK accounting, covering the preparation process, Companies House and HMRC deadlines, required components, and director responsibilities.
Year-end accounts (also called annual accounts or statutory accounts) are the financial statements that every UK limited company must prepare at the end of each accounting period. They provide a formal record of the company’s financial performance and position and must be filed at Companies House and submitted to HMRC with the corporation tax return.
The accounts are prepared in accordance with FRS 102 (or FRS 105 for micro-entities ) and must comply with the presentation and disclosure requirements of the Companies Act 2006.
Components of Year-End Accounts
A complete set of year-end accounts under FRS 102 comprises:
| Component | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Directors’ report | Describes the company’s activities, directors, and key events |
| Income statement (profit and loss account) | Shows revenue, costs, and profit or loss for the period |
| Balance sheet | Shows assets, liabilities , and equity at the year end |
| Statement of changes in equity | Reconciles movements in retained earnings and other reserves |
| Cash flow statement | Shows cash generated and spent during the period (exempt for small companies) |
| Notes to the accounts | Provides supporting detail, accounting policies, and required disclosures |
| Auditor’s report | Independent opinion on the accounts (if audit is required) |
Small companies may file abridged accounts at Companies House, omitting the income statement and certain notes, but full accounts must still be prepared for shareholders.
The Year-End Process
Step 1: Close the Books
Ensure all transactions for the period have been recorded:
- Process all sales invoices and purchase invoices
- Record all bank transactions
- Post petty cash
- Complete payroll for the final month
Step 2: Perform Reconciliations
- Bank reconciliation – confirm the cash book agrees with all bank statements
- Debtors reconciliation – review accounts receivable balances against customer statements
- Creditors reconciliation – verify accounts payable balances against supplier statements
- VAT reconciliation – ensure VAT returns agree with the ledger
- Intercompany reconciliation (for groups) – confirm balances between group companies
Step 3: Make Year-End Adjustments
| Adjustment | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Accruals | Recognise expenses incurred but not yet invoiced |
| Prepayments | Defer expenses paid in advance to the correct period |
| Depreciation | Charge the annual wear and tear of fixed assets |
| Stock adjustment | Record closing stock at the lower of cost and net realisable value |
| Bad debt provision | Write off or provide for doubtful receivables |
| Provisions | Recognise liabilities of uncertain timing or amount |
| Deferred income | Defer revenue received for services not yet delivered |
| Corporation tax | Calculate and accrue the estimated tax charge |
Step 4: Prepare the Trial Balance
The trial balance lists all ledger accounts with their debit and credit balances. Total debits must equal total credits. Any imbalance indicates an error that must be corrected before the accounts are finalised.
Step 5: Draft the Financial Statements
Using the adjusted trial balance, prepare the income statement, balance sheet, cash flow statement, and notes. The statements must follow the Companies Act formats and comply with FRS 102 (or FRS 105).
Step 6: Director Approval
At least one director must sign the balance sheet to confirm that the accounts have been prepared in accordance with the Companies Act and give a true and fair view of the company’s financial position. The directors are responsible for the accounts, not the accountant.
Step 7: Audit (If Required)
If the company exceeds the audit threshold, an independent auditor examines the accounts and issues an audit report.
Step 8: File
The accounts are filed at Companies House and submitted to HMRC with the CT600 corporation tax return.
Filing Deadlines
| Obligation | Deadline |
|---|---|
| Accounts at Companies House (private company) | 9 months after the accounting reference date |
| Accounts at Companies House (public company) | 6 months after the accounting reference date |
| CT600 corporation tax return (HMRC) | 12 months after the end of the accounting period |
| Corporation tax payment | 9 months and 1 day after the period end |
| Confirmation statement (Companies House) | Within 14 days of the review period end |
Late Filing Penalties
| How Late (Private Company) | Penalty |
|---|---|
| Up to 1 month | £150 |
| 1 to 3 months | £375 |
| 3 to 6 months | £750 |
| Over 6 months | £1,500 |
Penalties double if the accounts are late in two consecutive years.
What Companies House Requires
The level of detail depends on the company’s size:
| Size | What Must Be Filed |
|---|---|
| Micro-entity | Abridged balance sheet and limited notes only |
| Small | Abridged or full balance sheet, limited notes, no P&L required |
| Medium | Full accounts with some reduced disclosures |
| Large | Full accounts with all disclosures, plus directors’ report and auditor’s report |
Small companies that choose to file abridged accounts at Companies House must still prepare full accounts for their shareholders.
Year-End Accounts and Corporation Tax
The statutory accounts are the starting point for the corporation tax computation. The accountant adjusts the accounting profit for items treated differently under tax law:
- Add back depreciation (replaced by capital allowances)
- Add back disallowed expenses (entertaining, general provisions)
- Deduct capital allowances (Annual Investment Allowance, writing-down allowances)
- Adjust for timing differences that create deferred tax
The computed taxable profit is charged at the relevant rate:
| Band | Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to £50,000 | 19% (small profits rate) |
| £50,001 - £250,000 | Marginal relief |
| Above £250,000 | 25% (main rate) |
Year-End Accounts for Groups
If a company is a parent with subsidiaries, it may need to prepare consolidated accounts in addition to its individual accounts. Group accounts combine the financial statements of all group companies, eliminating intercompany transactions and balances.
Small groups (meeting two of three criteria: aggregate turnover up to £10.2 million net, balance sheet total up to £5.1 million net, up to 50 employees) are generally exempt from consolidation.
Director Responsibilities
Directors have legal duties regarding year-end accounts under the Companies Act 2006:
- Prepare accounts that give a true and fair view (section 393)
- Keep adequate accounting records (section 386)
- Approve and sign the balance sheet (section 414)
- File accounts on time at Companies House (section 441)
- Not approve accounts they know are misleading (section 393)
Failure to meet these obligations can result in personal fines, disqualification, and in serious cases, criminal prosecution.
Year-End Checklist
| Task | Status |
|---|---|
| All transactions recorded | |
| Bank reconciliation complete | |
| Debtors and creditors reconciled | |
| Stock count completed and valued | |
| Fixed asset register updated | |
| Depreciation calculated | |
| Accruals and prepayments recorded | |
| Bad debt provision reviewed | |
| VAT reconciliation complete | |
| Payroll reconciliation complete | |
| Corporation tax estimated and accrued | |
| Trial balance balanced | |
| Comparative figures checked | |
| Directors’ report drafted | |
| Accounts approved by directors | |
| Filed at Companies House | |
| CT600 filed with HMRC |
Choosing an Accountant
Most small and medium UK companies appoint an external accountant to prepare year-end accounts. Key considerations:
| Factor | What to Look For |
|---|---|
| Qualifications | ACA, ACCA, or AAT qualified |
| Experience | Sector knowledge and company size experience |
| Services | Year-end accounts, tax return, company secretarial, advisory |
| Fees | Fixed fee for defined scope; understand what is included |
| Software | Compatible with the company’s accounting system |
| Turnaround | Accounts completed well within the filing deadline |
Providing the accountant with clean, reconciled records reduces fees and speeds up the process. Good management accounts throughout the year make the year-end process significantly smoother.