Month-End Checklist for a Small Business
Introduction
Month-end is the point where small business accounting becomes calmer.
It is the moment to stop, check the records, understand what happened, and decide what needs attention before the next month begins.
Many small businesses leave accounting until year-end, VAT return time, or tax return time. That creates stress because the owner has to rebuild weeks or months of transactions from memory, bank statements, email inboxes, missing receipts and unclear notes.
A better habit is simple:
Close each month while the information is still fresh.
A month-end checklist does not need to be complicated. It should help the business answer:
- What did we invoice?
- What money actually came in?
- What expenses and bills did we record?
- What still needs paying?
- What receipts are missing?
- Does the bank match the records?
- Did we make profit?
- Is cash safe?
- Is VAT relevant?
- What needs action next?
For the overall foundation, read Small Business Accounting Basics: Start Here.
Why month-end matters
Month-end matters because small problems become bigger when they are ignored.
A missing receipt is easy to fix after 3 days.
It is harder after 9 months.
An unpaid invoice is easier to chase when it first becomes overdue.
It is harder after 90 days.
A supplier bill is easier to plan before it becomes urgent.
It is harder when the bank balance is already low.
Month-end helps the owner move from reaction to control.
| Without month-end review | With month-end review |
|---|---|
| Records pile up | Records are cleaned regularly |
| Missing receipts are forgotten | Missing evidence is listed early |
| Invoices become overdue silently | Unpaid customers are visible |
| Supplier bills surprise the owner | Payables are planned |
| VAT becomes a filing panic | VAT is reviewed during the period |
| Bank balance is trusted blindly | Bank is reconciled to records |
| Profit is guessed | Profit is reviewed |
| Cash pressure appears late | Cash pressure is spotted earlier |
Month-end is not only an accounting habit.
It is a business control habit.
Month-end is not year-end
Month-end and year-end have different purposes.
| Review type | Main purpose |
|---|---|
| Weekly review | Catch urgent cash and payment issues |
| Month-end review | Clean records, review reports and decide next actions |
| VAT period review | Prepare VAT records and return if VAT registered |
| Payroll period review | Check pay, deductions and employer records if relevant |
| Year-end review | Prepare annual reports, accounts, tax returns and accountant pack |
Month-end is the monthly maintenance layer.
It does not replace accountant review.
It does not replace VAT filing.
It does not replace tax filing.
But it makes all of those tasks easier because the records are not left untouched for too long.
The month-end mindset
The best month-end question is not:
Are the accounts perfect?
The better question is:
Are the records clear enough to understand what happened and what needs action?
A practical month-end review should produce:
| Output | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Clean invoice list | Shows what was charged |
| Matched customer payments | Shows what cash arrived |
| Aged receivables | Shows who still owes money |
| Recorded bills and expenses | Shows what costs exist |
| Aged payables | Shows who needs paying |
| Attached receipts | Supports evidence |
| Reconciled bank | Supports report trust |
| Profit and loss review | Shows performance |
| Cash flow review | Shows short-term safety |
| VAT review if registered | Supports VAT readiness |
| Missing evidence list | Shows what needs fixing |
| Next action list | Turns review into work |
Month-end should not only produce reports.
It should produce decisions.
Step 1: Check all sales and invoices
Start with income.
Ask:
- Did we invoice all completed work?
- Did we record all sales?
- Are draft invoices still waiting?
- Are invoice numbers complete?
- Are invoice dates correct?
- Are customer details correct?
- Are VAT details correct if relevant?
- Are deposits or stage payments recorded properly?
- Are credit notes linked to the original invoices?
A simple sales review:
| Check | Done? |
|---|---|
| All completed work invoiced | ☐ |
| Draft invoices reviewed | ☐ |
| Invoice numbers checked | ☐ |
| Customer details checked | ☐ |
| VAT treatment checked if relevant | ☐ |
| Credit notes reviewed | ☐ |
| Deposits linked to final invoices | ☐ |
Invoices are the starting point for customer money.
If invoices are missing, revenue and receivables will be wrong.
For the invoice/payment difference, read Invoice vs Payment: Why They Should Not Be Mixed Up.
Step 2: Match customer payments
After invoices, check payments.
A customer payment should be matched to the correct invoice or customer account.
Ask:
- Which invoices were paid?
- Which invoices are part-paid?
- Which payments are unmatched?
- Did customers use unclear references?
- Did one payment cover several invoices?
- Did a payment provider deduct fees?
- Were any refunds issued?
- Were any overpayments received?
A payment matching review:
| Payment issue | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Full payment matched | Invoice can be marked paid |
| Part-payment matched | Remaining balance stays visible |
| Overpayment identified | Customer credit or refund needed |
| Unmatched payment reviewed | Prevents mystery cash |
| Payment provider fees recorded | Keeps cash and income clear |
| Refunds matched | Corrects customer account |
| Customer deposits identified | Links cash to future work |
The bank may show money arrived, but accounting needs to know why it arrived.
For more, read Revenue vs Cash Received.
Step 3: Review aged receivables
Aged receivables show who owes the business money.
At month-end, review:
| Receivables question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| What is total unpaid? | Shows cash still waiting |
| What is overdue? | Shows collection risk |
| What is over 30 days overdue? | Needs stronger review |
| Which customer owes the most? | Shows concentration risk |
| Which customer pays slowly every month? | Shows behaviour pattern |
| Are any invoices disputed? | Needs resolution |
| Were promised payments received? | Supports follow-up |
| Should any work pause until payment? | Reduces exposure |
A simple receivables ageing view:
| Age band | Action |
|---|---|
| Not due yet | Monitor |
| 1–7 days overdue | Friendly reminder |
| 8–30 days overdue | Follow up and ask for payment date |
| 31–60 days overdue | Escalate |
| Over 60 days overdue | Review recovery or stop further exposure |
Month-end should produce a chasing list.
Do not let unpaid invoices roll forward silently.
For the full guide, read When to Look at Aged Receivables.
Step 4: Record supplier bills
Next, check supplier bills.
Ask:
- Did we enter all supplier bills?
- Are any bills still sitting in email?
- Are due dates recorded?
- Are amounts correct?
- Are VAT details correct if relevant?
- Are bills duplicated?
- Are credit notes missing?
- Are disputed bills marked clearly?
- Are large bills explained?
A supplier bill review:
| Check | Done? |
|---|---|
| Supplier invoices entered | ☐ |
| Due dates recorded | ☐ |
| VAT details checked if relevant | ☐ |
| Duplicate bills checked | ☐ |
| Credit notes linked | ☐ |
| Disputed bills marked | ☐ |
| Large or unusual bills flagged | ☐ |
Supplier bills matter because they show future cash commitments.
A bill may exist before cash leaves the bank.
For the difference between bills and expenses, read Bill vs Expense: What Is the Real Difference?.
Step 5: Review aged payables
Aged payables show what the business still needs to pay.
At month-end, review:
| Payables question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| What is total unpaid? | Shows supplier obligations |
| What is due this week? | Immediate cash planning |
| What is overdue? | Supplier relationship risk |
| Which bills are disputed? | Needs resolution |
| Which bills are duplicated? | Prevents overpayment |
| Are payment dates scheduled? | Prevents missed due dates |
| Are critical suppliers protected? | Keeps operations running |
| Is owner withdrawal safe? | Protects committed cash |
Aged payables should be reviewed with aged receivables.
If customers are late and suppliers are due, the business may need a cash plan.
For the full explanation, read What Is Aged Payables?.
Step 6: Record expenses and upload receipts
Month-end is the time to catch missing receipts before they disappear.
Ask:
- Are all card payments explained?
- Are cash expenses recorded?
- Are receipt photos clear?
- Are supplier invoices attached?
- Are categories correct?
- Are personal expenses separated?
- Are large purchases flagged?
- Is VAT evidence present if relevant?
A receipt and expense review:
| Expense check | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Receipt attached | Supports evidence |
| Supplier visible | Shows source |
| Date visible | Supports timing |
| Amount visible | Supports record |
| VAT visible if relevant | Supports VAT record |
| Business purpose clear | Supports why cost belongs |
| Category correct | Supports reports |
| Duplicate record checked | Prevents overstated expenses |
Do not rely only on bank transactions.
The bank shows money moved.
The receipt explains what was bought.
For recordkeeping, read What Records Should a Small Business Keep?.
Step 7: Reconcile the bank
Bank reconciliation is one of the most important month-end steps.
It checks whether accounting records agree with bank movement.
At month-end, review:
| Reconciliation check | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Customer payments matched | Keeps invoices accurate |
| Supplier payments matched | Keeps payables accurate |
| Expenses matched | Prevents missing or duplicate costs |
| Transfers identified | Prevents false income or expenses |
| Bank fees recorded | Keeps expenses complete |
| Refunds matched | Corrects records |
| VAT or tax payments matched | Supports liabilities |
| Loan payments reviewed | Keeps debt records clear |
| Unknown transactions investigated | Removes mystery items |
If reconciliation is not done, reports may be unreliable.
The profit and loss may look clean, but the records behind it may be wrong.
For the deeper guide, read Why Reconciliation Matters.
Step 8: Check VAT if registered
If the business is VAT registered, VAT should be reviewed at month-end, even if the VAT return is not due yet.
Ask:
- Were all VAT sales invoices recorded?
- Are supplier VAT invoices attached?
- Are VAT rates correct?
- Are VAT codes sensible?
- Are credit notes included?
- Are refunds matched?
- Are deposits reviewed?
- Are reverse charge items flagged?
- Are imports or overseas supplier invoices reviewed?
- Is VAT reserve protected?
A VAT month-end review:
| VAT check | Done? |
|---|---|
| Sales VAT reviewed | ☐ |
| Purchase VAT reviewed | ☐ |
| VAT evidence attached | ☐ |
| VAT codes checked | ☐ |
| Credit notes included | ☐ |
| Refunds matched | ☐ |
| Reverse charge reviewed if relevant | ☐ |
| VAT reserve checked | ☐ |
| VAT report reviewed | ☐ |
VAT becomes stressful when daily records are weak.
Month-end keeps the next VAT return calmer.
For VAT workflow, read Preparing for a VAT Return.
Step 9: Check payroll if you employ people
If the business has employees, payroll records should be reviewed.
Ask:
- Were wages processed correctly?
- Were deductions recorded?
- Were pension contributions recorded?
- Were payments made to employees?
- Were HMRC payroll payments recorded?
- Were reimbursements and staff expenses handled?
- Are payroll records stored?
- Are any corrections needed?
A payroll month-end review:
| Payroll check | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Pay run completed | Employees paid correctly |
| Payslips issued | Employee evidence |
| PAYE/NIC recorded | Employer records complete |
| Pension contributions recorded | Pension duties supported |
| Staff expenses reviewed | Avoids missing reimbursements |
| HMRC payment matched | Bank and payroll agree |
| Payroll reports saved | Supports records |
| Corrections noted | Prevents future errors |
If the business has no staff, this step may not apply.
But if payroll exists, it should not be left outside month-end review.
Step 10: Review profit and loss
After income, expenses and reconciliation, review the profit and loss.
Ask:
| P&L question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| What was total income? | Shows activity |
| What were direct costs? | Shows delivery cost |
| What was gross profit? | Shows strength of sales |
| What were overheads? | Shows running cost |
| What was net profit or loss? | Shows result |
| Which costs increased? | Shows pressure |
| Which income streams performed? | Shows business direction |
| Did profit match expectations? | Supports decision-making |
| Did customers actually pay? | Connects profit to cash |
The profit and loss should not be read as one final number.
It should be read as a story.
For a full guide, read How to Read a Profit and Loss Statement.
Step 11: Review the bank vs profit
Profit and bank movement can tell different stories.
At month-end, compare them.
| Situation | What it may mean |
|---|---|
| Profit good, bank weak | Customers may not have paid, bills may have been paid first |
| Profit weak, bank good | Old invoices, loans, deposits or owner transfers may have increased cash |
| Profit good, bank good | Healthy sign, but still check commitments |
| Profit weak, bank weak | Business needs attention |
Ask:
- Did cash increase or decrease?
- Did profit increase or decrease?
- Are unpaid invoices growing?
- Are unpaid bills growing?
- Did a large loan, deposit or transfer affect the bank?
- Is VAT or tax money inside the bank balance?
- What cash is genuinely free?
For this exact comparison, read How to Read Your Bank vs Profit and Loss.
Step 12: Review the balance sheet
The balance sheet shows what the business owns and owes at a point in time.
At month-end, review:
| Balance sheet area | What to check |
|---|---|
| Bank cash | Is cash explained and reconciled? |
| Receivables | Who still owes money? |
| Payables | Who needs paying? |
| VAT liabilities | Is VAT reserve needed? |
| Payroll liabilities | Are payroll amounts outstanding? |
| Loans | Are balances and repayments correct? |
| Stock | Is stock movement reasonable? |
| Equipment | Any large purchases or disposals? |
| Owner/director balances | Are money movements explained? |
A balance sheet review prevents the owner from thinking only about profit.
The business may be profitable and still owe suppliers, lenders, HMRC or customers.
For the full guide, read What a Balance Sheet Actually Tells You.
Step 13: Review cash flow and working capital
Cash flow and working capital show whether the business has enough short-term strength.
Ask:
| Cash question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| What cash is available now? | Shows immediate resource |
| What money is expected next month? | Shows incoming cash |
| What bills are due next month? | Shows outgoing cash |
| What invoices are overdue? | Shows collection pressure |
| What supplier bills are overdue? | Shows payment pressure |
| Is VAT or tax reserve protected? | Prevents deadline shock |
| Is stock tying up cash? | Shows working capital pressure |
| Are owner withdrawals safe? | Protects operations |
Working capital is the space between short-term resources and short-term obligations.
For more, read What Working Capital Means in a Small Business.
Step 14: Check missing records
Every month-end should produce a missing-records list.
Missing items may include:
| Missing item | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Customer invoice | Sales may be incomplete |
| Supplier bill | Costs/payables may be missing |
| Receipt | Expense evidence weak |
| VAT invoice | VAT reclaim confidence weak |
| Bank match | Reconciliation incomplete |
| Credit note | Correction missing |
| Refund record | Cash correction unclear |
| Payroll record | Employer records incomplete |
| Contract or order | Transaction context missing |
| Asset invoice | Balance sheet record weak |
The missing-records list is not a failure.
It is a to-do list.
Month-end is the moment to fix it before the next month adds more transactions.
Step 15: Create next actions
A month-end review should end with actions.
Examples:
| Finding | Next action |
|---|---|
| Customer invoices overdue | Send reminders |
| Supplier bills due soon | Schedule payments |
| Receipt missing | Request or upload receipt |
| VAT code unclear | Flag for review |
| Bank transaction unmatched | Investigate |
| Profit margin falling | Review pricing or costs |
| Cash falling | Review receivables and spending |
| Stock increasing | Review stock movement |
| Owner withdrawals high | Review free cash |
| Payroll payment unmatched | Match and save records |
Reports are useful only when they lead to decisions.
Do not close month-end with “interesting numbers.”
Close it with actions.
Simple month-end checklist
Use this checklist every month.
| Area | Check |
|---|---|
| Sales | All completed work invoiced |
| Invoices | Drafts, due dates and VAT details reviewed |
| Payments | Customer payments matched |
| Receivables | Unpaid and overdue invoices reviewed |
| Bills | Supplier bills entered |
| Payables | Due and overdue supplier bills reviewed |
| Expenses | Expenses recorded and categorised |
| Receipts | Missing receipts listed |
| Bank | Bank reconciled |
| VAT | VAT records reviewed if registered |
| Payroll | Payroll checked if employer |
| Profit | Profit and loss reviewed |
| Balance sheet | Assets and liabilities reviewed |
| Cash | Cash flow and working capital reviewed |
| Records | Missing documents listed |
| Actions | Next action list created |
This is the core month-end workflow.
It can be simple at first and more detailed as the business grows.
Month-end checklist by business type
Different businesses need different emphasis.
| Business type | Month-end focus |
|---|---|
| Sole trader | Income, expenses, receipts, tax reserve, unpaid invoices |
| Freelancer | Invoices, payments, receipts, cash flow, customer chasing |
| VAT-registered business | VAT invoices, supplier VAT evidence, VAT reserve, reconciliation |
| Limited company | Company records, director loan, payables, Corporation Tax reserve |
| Employer | Payroll records, employee payments, PAYE/NIC, pension records |
| Product business | Stock, supplier bills, sales, VAT, cash tied in inventory |
| Service business | Invoices, deposits, customer payments, subcontractor costs |
| Construction business | Supplier bills, subcontractors, CIS/VAT review if relevant |
| Landlord | Rent received, property costs, evidence, cash flow |
This is why month-end should be flexible.
The checklist should fit the business model.
Month-end red flags
Month-end can reveal early warnings.
| Red flag | What it may mean |
|---|---|
| Bank falling while profit is positive | Customers may not be paying |
| Receivables growing | Cash trapped in unpaid invoices |
| Payables growing | Supplier pressure building |
| Missing receipts increasing | Evidence weakening |
| VAT reserve missing | Future VAT pressure likely |
| Owner withdrawals high | Business cash may be drained |
| Stock rising but sales flat | Cash tied up |
| Reconciliation behind | Reports may not be reliable |
| Profit margin falling | Costs or pricing need review |
| Payroll or tax payments unmatched | Records need correction |
A red flag is not automatic failure.
It means “look closer now.”
That is the value of month-end.
Month-end review rhythm
A good rhythm is:
| Time | Action |
|---|---|
| During the month | Record invoices, bills, receipts and payments |
| Weekly | Review bank, receivables and payables |
| Last few days of month | Check missing records |
| First few days after month-end | Reconcile and review reports |
| After review | Create action list |
| Before next month moves too far | Fix missing items |
The business should not wait until all memory is gone.
Month-end works best when the owner still remembers what happened.
What to save after month-end
After month-end, save or keep access to:
| Month-end output | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Profit and loss report | Monthly performance |
| Bank reconciliation report | Record confidence |
| Aged receivables | Customer money owed |
| Aged payables | Supplier money owed |
| VAT report if registered | VAT position |
| Balance sheet | Wider position |
| Missing records list | Evidence follow-up |
| Action list | Next business tasks |
| Cash flow review | Short-term planning |
| Notes on unusual items | Helps accountant review |
These records help future review.
They also make accountant export and year-end cleaner.
Common month-end mistakes
Mistake 1: Waiting until year-end
Monthly review prevents year-end panic.
Mistake 2: Looking only at the bank
The bank does not show unpaid invoices, unpaid bills, VAT reserves or profit quality.
Mistake 3: Not reconciling
Reports are weaker when payments and records do not match.
Mistake 4: Ignoring unpaid invoices
Receivables should be reviewed before cash becomes urgent.
Mistake 5: Ignoring unpaid bills
Payables show future claims on cash.
Mistake 6: Not checking VAT regularly
VAT should not be a deadline-only task.
Mistake 7: Forgetting payroll records
Employers need payroll evidence and payment records.
Mistake 8: Not listing missing receipts
Missing evidence grows quickly if ignored.
Mistake 9: Reviewing reports without actions
Reports should lead to decisions.
Mistake 10: Treating month-end as perfection
Month-end is a control habit, not a perfection ritual.
Final summary
Month-end is the monthly control point of a small business.
It helps the owner review:
- sales,
- invoices,
- customer payments,
- unpaid invoices,
- supplier bills,
- unpaid supplier balances,
- expenses,
- receipts,
- bank reconciliation,
- VAT if registered,
- payroll if relevant,
- profit and loss,
- bank vs profit,
- balance sheet,
- cash flow,
- working capital,
- missing records,
- next actions.
The main lesson is simple:
Month-end turns accounting from panic into rhythm.
A small business does not need to wait until year-end to understand what is happening.
It can review the money story every month:
What came in.
What went out.
What is still owed.
What still needs paying.
What evidence is missing.
What reports say.
What needs action next.
That is how accounting becomes useful during the year, not only after the year is over.