Month-End Close for SMEs: A Simple 10-Step Checklist That Stops Surprises
What Does a CFO-Led Outsourced Accounting and Bookkeeping Model Actually Look Like?
If you run a Canadian SME, you don’t need “perfect” accounting.
You need reliable numbers, on time, so you can make decisions without second-guessing.
That’s what a good month-end close gives you:
- Clear profit performance (not guesses)
- A real view of cash and working capital
- Fewer year-end cleanups
- Fewer “surprises” from your accountant, your bank, or CRA
If you’re still deciding whether finance should sit in-house or be outsourced, these two posts provide useful context:
The problem is that many SMEs don’t actually close the month. They “update the books” and move on. A close is different. It’s a repeatable process that produces a consistent set of outputs every month.
Why month-end close slips in SMEs
Most owners don’t skip month-end close because they don’t care. They skip it because the process is unclear.
Here’s what typically gets in the way:
| Common issue | What it looks like in real life | The cost |
|---|---|---|
| No close calendar | “We’ll do it when we can” | Always behind |
| Weak AP/AR discipline | Bills and invoices aren’t captured cleanly | Profit and cash don’t match reality |
| Reconciliations not done | Bank/credit cards not reconciled monthly | Errors pile up |
| Inventory not accurate | Inventory adjustments happen “later” | Margins become unreliable |
| No one owns the process | Everyone assumes someone else is doing it | Close becomes optional |
If any of this sounds familiar, the fix is not “work harder.”
The fix is a checklist.
Before we go into the 10 steps, align on the outputs.
A solid close should produce these items every month:
| Monthly output | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Profit & Loss (P&L) | Shows whether you are making money, and where |
| Balance Sheet | Shows what you own/owe and whether the books are clean |
| Cash summary | Prevents cash surprises |
| AR aging + collections notes | Drives cash and reduces bad debts |
| AP aging + payables plan | Prevents missed bills and manages liquidity |
| KPI snapshot | Turns financials into decisions |
| Variance notes (1 page) | Explains “what changed and why” in plain English |
If your monthly reporting doesn’t include at least these, you are probably not closing properly. (And if you’re unsure what your true accounting cost is, revisit: In-House vs Outsourced Accounting… Cost Comparison.)
A realistic close timeline for SMEs (7 business days)
Many SMEs can achieve a close in 7 business days if the inputs are clean.
| Day | Target | What must be ready |
|---|---|---|
| Day 0–1 | Capture transactions | Sales, bills, payroll, bank feeds updated |
| Day 2–3 | Reconcile accounts | Bank, credit cards, key balance sheet accounts |
| Day 3–4 | Accruals + adjustments | Prepaids, accruals, revenue timing, inventory |
| Day 4–5 | Draft financials | P&L, balance sheet, cash view |
| Day 5–7 | Review + publish | Variances explained, KPIs updated, owner review |
Even if your close takes 10 days today, the checklist below will move you in the right direction.
The 10-step month-end close checklist (SME version)
1) Lock the cutoff date (and stick to it)
Decide what belongs in the month and what doesn’t.
- Example: supplier invoices received after the 3rd business day go into next month (unless material).
Tip: Consistency beats perfection.
2) Finalize sales and customer invoices
Confirm:
- All invoices issued for the month
- Credit notes properly recorded
- Deferred revenue handled consistently (if applicable)
Common failure point: revenue is understated because invoicing is late.
3) Capture all supplier bills (and match to POs where possible)
Ensure:
- All bills are entered (even if unpaid)
- Duplicate bills are avoided
- Large one-off items are flagged (capex vs expense)
Owner impact: this is where “profit surprises” usually come from.
4) Close payroll and record payroll liabilities
Confirm:
- Payroll for the month is complete
- Payroll liabilities are recorded properly (CPP, EI, taxes, benefits)
Common failure point: payroll is processed but not fully reflected in the month.
5) Reconcile bank accounts (every month, no exceptions)
Reconcile:
- Main operating account
- Savings/loan accounts
- Any merchant/clearing accounts (Stripe, Square, PayPal)
If you don’t reconcile monthly, errors don’t disappear—they compound.
6) Reconcile credit cards and employee expenses
Confirm:
- Card transactions are matched to receipts
- Personal expenses are separated
- Categorization is consistent
Simple rule: no receipts, no reimbursement (or use a clear policy).
7) Review accounts receivable (AR) and update collections notes
Produce an AR aging and answer:
- What is overdue?
- Who is responsible for follow-up?
- What’s the realistic collection probability?
This is not accounting—this is cash management.
8) Review accounts payable (AP) and plan payments
Produce an AP aging and confirm:
- What must be paid immediately
- What can be scheduled
- Which vendors require attention
Owner benefit: prevents urgent last-minute cash stress.
9) Post recurring entries and month-end adjustments
Typical monthly adjustments include:
- Prepaids (insurance, rent, annual software)
- Accruals (utilities, contractor invoices not received)
- Loan interest and principal splits
- Depreciation/amortization (if tracked monthly)
- Inventory or WIP adjustments (if applicable)
Goal: reflect the economic reality of the month.
10) Review the numbers and publish the close pack
Do a simple review that any owner can understand:
- Compare this month vs last month
- Compare actual vs budget (if you have one)
- Flag the top 5 movements and explain why
Then publish a one-page summary:
- Revenue, gross margin, net profit
- Cash position and key drivers
- AR/AP highlights
- 6–10 KPIs relevant to the business
If the numbers don’t lead to decisions, the close isn’t finished.
Who should own each step?
A close fails when nobody owns it. Here’s a practical ownership model:
| Close step | Typical owner (in-house) | Typical owner (outsourced) |
|---|---|---|
| Sales + invoicing | Admin / AR | Outsourced team + your sales admin |
| Bills + AP | Bookkeeper | Outsourced team |
| Payroll | Payroll provider + internal admin | Payroll provider |
| Reconciliations | Bookkeeper | Outsourced team |
| AR collections | Owner/GM + internal admin | Owner/GM + outsourced tracking |
| Adjustments | Controller/Accountant | Outsourced accountant/controller |
| Review + decisions | Owner/GM | Owner/GM (with outsourced insights) |
Outsourcing works best when the business still owns approvals and decisions, and the outsourced team owns the process, discipline, and reporting cadence.
The payoff: what changes when you close monthly
When month-end close becomes routine, owners typically notice:
- Fewer surprises at year-end
- Faster responses from lenders and investors
- Better pricing and margin decisions
- Earlier detection of cashflow issues
- More confidence to delegate finance admin
Most importantly, you stop running the business on “bank balance thinking.”
Final thought
If you want better financial clarity, start here:
a simple close checklist, done consistently, every month.
If you’d like, SMI Consulting Inc can help you:
- implement a close calendar,
- build a monthly close pack (P&L, balance sheet, cash, KPIs),
- and establish clear responsibilities (so it doesn’t rely on one person).
- By Syed Irfan- CEO
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