77 tagged with "Reconciliation"
Bank reconciliation techniques for accurate financial records
Opening Balances Done Right: Mid-Year Setup and Clearing the OBE Account
Opening Balance Equity is the suspense account accounting software creates to keep the balance sheet in balance during migration. Build a supportable opening trial balance, reconcile every account at the cutover date, then journal OBE into Retained Earnings, Owner's Capital, or Common Stock and Additional Paid-in Capital based on entity type.
Recording Sales Tax You Collect: A Liability, Not Revenue
Sales tax you collect belongs to the state, not your revenue line. Here are the journal entries, the month-end reconciliation routine, and the multi-state economic nexus rules that keep your books audit-ready.
Recording Sales Tax You Collect: A Liability, Not Revenue
Sales tax you collect belongs on the balance sheet as Sales Tax Payable, never on the income statement. Split each taxable sale into Sales Revenue and a tax liability, keep one account per jurisdiction, and reconcile so the payable zeroes out at filing time.
Suspense Accounts: How to Park Unidentified Transactions and Still Close on Time
A suspense account is a temporary ledger account that holds an unidentified transaction or an unexplained trial-balance difference so the month-end close can finish on time. This guide covers when to use one, how to record and clear the entries, and how it differs from a clearing account.
Form 1099-DA in 2026: Reconcile Per-Wallet Crypto Cost Basis and Avoid Overpaying
Form 1099-DA reports gross crypto proceeds but often leaves cost basis blank, and filing it as-is defaults basis to zero — taxing the full sale price. Here is how per-wallet tracking and reconciliation against the form let you pay tax on your actual gain.
Segregation of Duties With Three Employees: Preventing Embezzlement at Small Businesses
The median fraud at a company with fewer than 100 employees costs $141,000. This guide explains how to apply segregation of duties — separating authorization, custody, recordkeeping, and reconciliation — and use compensating controls when you have only three employees.
1099-K Threshold Whiplash: What Gig Workers and Online Sellers Need to Know for 2026
For the 2026 tax year the Form 1099-K threshold reverted to $20,000 and more than 200 transactions, but you must still report all income whether or not a form arrives. This guide explains who gets a 1099-K, how to reconcile Box 1a from gross to taxable income, and where the numbers go on Schedule C or Schedule 1.
Bank Reconciliation Done Right: The Monthly Process That Catches Errors and Fraud Early
A monthly bank reconciliation done in 30 to 90 minutes is the cheapest fraud control a small business has. This guide walks through the two-column worksheet, how to handle outstanding checks and deposits in transit, the recurring items that trip people up, and the internal controls that turn the exercise into real protection.
From Three Weeks to Five Days: A Faster Month-End Close With Cut-Off Discipline and Smarter Reconciliations
A day-by-day close calendar that compresses a typical three-week month-end into five business days. Pre-stage recurring entries, reconcile cash on day one, tie sub-ledgers on day two, post accruals and prepaids on day three, run flux analysis on day four, and lock the period on day five.
How to Close the Books in Five Days: Checklists, Cut-Off Discipline, and Reconciliation Order
A three-week close compresses into five business days through three habits—a written close checklist sequenced by dependency, firm cut-off procedures with accruals for late items, and reconciliation done high-risk-first in a consistent order.
Form 1099-DA, Per-Wallet Cost Basis, and the Rev. Proc. 2024-28 Safe Harbor: A 2026 Crypto Tax Guide
Form 1099-DA introduces IRS broker reporting for digital asset sales beginning with 2025 transactions and adds cost-basis reporting for covered assets in 2026. Rev. Proc. 2024-28 simultaneously ends universal wallet accounting in favor of per-account allocation. This guide explains how investors and businesses reconcile 1099-DA against their own records, use the one-time safe harbor, and avoid paying capital gains tax twice.
IOLTA and Client Trust Accounting: Three-Way Reconciliation, Earned vs. Unearned Fees, and the Mistakes That End Careers
How law firms run IOLTA accounts under ABA Model Rule 1.15 — separating earned from unearned fees, matching the bank statement to the master ledger and per-client sub-ledgers in a three-way reconciliation, and avoiding the four commingling mistakes (firm money in trust, firm expenses from trust, earned fees left in trust, one client's funds covering another's disbursement) that drive most bar discipline cases.