What Is the Monthly Close Process
The monthly close is the set of accounting activities that transforms raw transaction data into auditable, decision-ready financial statements. It is not simply running a report in your ERP. A complete close encompasses: reconciling every balance sheet account to a source document, recording accruals and prepaid amortization, ensuring revenue is recognized in the correct period, eliminating intercompany transactions, and producing a financial package that stakeholders can rely on. Done well, the monthly close produces a P&L, balance sheet, and cash flow statement that accurately reflect the financial position of the business as of the last day of the month.
The close matters for three constituencies. For internal decision-making, financial statements must be timely enough to be actionable—a close that finishes on day 15 means the board is reviewing results that are already two weeks stale when they see them. For lenders and debt covenants, most credit agreements require delivery of financial statements within 30–45 days of month end, and violations are technical defaults even if the company is solvent. For audit readiness, a company whose monthly close is clean and documented will spend 30%–50% less time on its annual audit than a company whose books are a mess that auditors must reconstruct from scratch.
The benchmark distinction that separates good finance teams from average ones is not the quality of the final output—it is how quickly they can produce it. A 3–5 day close and a 15-day close can produce identical financial statements. The difference is entirely in process design and automation.
Close Timeline Benchmarks
| Revenue Tier | Typical Close Duration | World-Class Target | Common Tools | Key Constraint |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| <$10M | 7–14 days | 4–6 days | QuickBooks, Xero | Part-time accounting staff, no close process documentation |
| $10M–$50M | 8–12 days | 4–5 days | QuickBooks Enterprise, Sage Intacct, NetSuite | Manual reconciliations, expense report timing, lack of automation |
| $50M–$150M | 6–10 days | 3–5 days | NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Dynamics 365 | Multi-entity eliminations, revenue recognition complexity |
| $150M–$500M | 5–8 days | 3–4 days | NetSuite, SAP, Dynamics 365, dedicated consolidation tools | Multi-currency, intercompany, complex equity comp |
| $500M+ | 3–6 days | 2–3 days | SAP, Oracle, Workiva, OneStream, Hyperion | Consolidation complexity, segment reporting, SEC requirements |
The close speed insight: The difference between a 10-day close and a 5-day close is almost never effort—it is process design and automation. Finance teams that close in 5 days are not working twice as hard; they have eliminated manual handoffs, automated reconciliations, and designed a close calendar that front-loads work before month end.
Common Bottlenecks
Most slow closes share the same bottlenecks. Understanding each—why it happens and how to fix it—is the foundation of close improvement work.
1. Bank Reconciliations Pending
Why it happens: Bank feeds are not connected to the ERP, or transactions are not coded daily. Reconciliation is deferred until close week when volume is highest and the person responsible is already doing ten other things. How to fix it: Implement daily bank feed reconciliation as a standing task, not a month-end task. Tools like Ramp, Brex, NetSuite, and Sage Intacct offer automated bank feed connections that reduce reconciliation from a multi-hour task to a review exercise. Target: all bank accounts reconciled within 1 business day of statement close.
2. Intercompany Eliminations
Why it happens: Intercompany transactions are not coded consistently across entities, or the elimination process is manual and dependent on one person with a spreadsheet. How to fix it: Enforce intercompany coding standards at transaction entry, not at close. Implement automated intercompany matching in your ERP if available (NetSuite and Sage Intacct both support this). For companies above $50M with 3+ entities, dedicated consolidation software (Workiva, OneStream, Vena) can reduce elimination time by 60%–80%.
3. Expense Report Lag
Why it happens: Employees submit expense reports late—often after month end—causing either delayed accruals or restated financials. How to fix it: Enforce a hard expense submission deadline (e.g., by the 2nd business day of the following month). Switch to corporate card programs (Ramp, Brex, Divvy) where transactions are captured in real time and expense reports are pre-populated, reducing submission time. For large transactions, implement a recurring accrual for predictable expenses (SaaS subscriptions, lease payments, regular contractors) that does not wait on an invoice.
4. Revenue Recognition Calculations
Why it happens: For companies with contracts, subscriptions, or professional services, revenue recognition under ASC 606 requires period allocation calculations that are often done in Excel outside the ERP. These calculations take time and are error-prone. How to fix it: Implement revenue recognition automation through your ERP (NetSuite's Revenue Management module, Sage Intacct's Revenue Recognition) or a dedicated RevRec tool (Maxio, Chargebee Revenue Recognition). The goal is revenue that is calculated automatically from contract data, not from a controller's spreadsheet.
5. Fixed Asset Depreciation
Why it happens: Fixed asset registers are maintained in spreadsheets. New assets added during the month are missing, partially depreciated, or coded to the wrong account. How to fix it: Maintain the fixed asset register in your ERP with auto-depreciation calculation. Every asset addition should be entered as a capital asset at the time of purchase, not retroactively at close.
6. Accrual Estimates
Why it happens: Accruals for items like bonuses, commissions, legal fees, and audit fees require judgment and are often prepared late in the close cycle. How to fix it: Build a standard accrual template with prior-period amounts pre-populated. Establish recurring accruals for predictable items (monthly audit fee accrual, monthly legal fee estimate). For variable accruals (commissions, bonuses), build the calculation into a standard spreadsheet that pulls from HR and sales systems, reducing calculation time from hours to minutes.
7. AP Cutoff Issues
Why it happens: Invoices received after month end for work performed in the prior month are either missed (understating expenses) or entered in the wrong period (requiring reversal). How to fix it: Implement a purchase order system so that goods received or services delivered trigger an accrual automatically, independent of invoice receipt. For companies without PO systems, establish a three-way match discipline (PO / receiving / invoice) and a clear AP cutoff policy communicated to all vendors.
8. Inventory Valuation
Why it happens: Inventory counts, cost adjustments, and obsolescence reserves are calculated manually and require physical count coordination. How to fix it: Implement perpetual inventory tracking in your ERP. Cycle counts replace annual physical counts and eliminate the month-end inventory valuation crunch. For companies with complex cost accounting (manufacturing, distribution), implementing standard cost vs. actual cost variance analysis eliminates the need to recalculate COGS from scratch each month.
The Close Checklist
A close checklist is the single most impactful process improvement most mid-market finance teams can implement. It converts the close from a tribal knowledge exercise into a documented, trackable process. Here is a template organized by close phase:
Pre-Close (Days -3 to 0 before Month End)
- Send expense report submission reminder to all employees (deadline: business day 2)
- Confirm all purchase orders are received and approved in system
- Request outstanding vendor invoices for significant open POs
- Review deferred revenue waterfall for contracts expiring or renewing
- Flag any unusual transactions from the month for investigation before close
- Confirm payroll processing is complete and coded correctly
- Verify subscription and SaaS billing cycles align with close period
- Alert intercompany partners to submit transactions for matching
Close Week (Business Days 1–5)
- Day 1: Lock sub-ledgers (AR, AP, inventory). Begin bank reconciliations. Post all payroll journal entries.
- Day 1–2: Process and post all vendor invoices received through cutoff. Record accruals for uninvoiced receipts.
- Day 2: Complete bank reconciliations for all accounts. Resolve any unexplained reconciling items.
- Day 2–3: Run revenue recognition. Post deferred revenue amortization. Reconcile deferred revenue rollforward to ERP balance.
- Day 3: Post fixed asset depreciation. Reconcile fixed asset sub-ledger to GL. Record prepaid amortization.
- Day 3–4: Post all standard journal entries (accruals, recurring amortization, tax provisions, intercompany eliminations).
- Day 4: Run trial balance. Reconcile all balance sheet accounts to source documents. Investigate any variance from prior month that is unexplained.
- Day 5: Controller reviews P&L and balance sheet. Identify flux items requiring explanation. Draft management commentary.
Post-Close (Days 6–7)
- Produce financial package: P&L, balance sheet, cash flow, and prior-period comparison
- Prepare management commentary on material variances vs. budget and prior period
- Update KPI dashboard with actuals
- Deliver flash report to CEO/CFO (if close day 5 or earlier)
- Archive close workpapers in shared drive with naming convention and date
- Log any issues encountered in close retrospective log for process improvement
Automation Opportunities
The close automation landscape has improved dramatically in the past five years. Here is where automation delivers the most time savings, organized by close activity:
Bank Reconciliation Automation
What gets automated: Transaction matching between bank statement and GL, flagging of unmatched items, daily reconciliation status tracking. Leading tools: Most modern ERPs (NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Xero) include bank feed connectivity and automated matching. Dedicated tools include ReconArt, AutoRec, and BlackLine's transaction matching module. Time savings: Companies with 5–10 bank accounts typically save 8–15 hours per close cycle.
AP and Invoice Automation
What gets automated: Invoice capture from email or vendor portal, GL coding suggestions from AI/ML, three-way match against POs, approval routing. Leading tools: Bill.com, Tipalti, Stampli, Yooz, AvidXchange. Time savings: 40%–60% reduction in AP processing time; eliminates most late invoice entries that cause AP cutoff problems.
Expense Management
What gets automated: Receipt capture (OCR), expense coding to GL, policy compliance flagging, approval workflows, direct ERP posting. Leading tools: Ramp, Brex, Divvy, Concur, Expensify. Corporate card programs with real-time transaction capture are the most effective solution because they eliminate the report submission lag entirely. Time savings: 6–10 hours per close cycle; virtually eliminates expense accrual uncertainty.
Revenue Recognition
What gets automated: SSP allocation for multi-element arrangements, period recognition schedule based on contract terms, revenue waterfall reporting, deferred revenue rollforward. Leading tools: Maxio (formerly SaaSOptics + Chargify), Chargebee Revenue Recognition, NetSuite ARM, Zuora Revenue. Time savings: For SaaS companies with hundreds of active contracts, revenue recognition automation typically saves 10–20 hours per close cycle and eliminates a high-risk manual calculation.
Consolidation and Reporting
What gets automated: Multi-entity elimination, currency translation, minority interest calculations, financial statement generation, management reporting packages. Leading tools: Workiva, OneStream, Vena, Planful, Adaptive Insights (Workday). For companies below $50M with 2–3 entities, ERP-native consolidation is usually sufficient. Above $50M or with 4+ entities, dedicated consolidation software pays for itself quickly. Time savings: 15–30 hours per close cycle for multi-entity companies.
Close Automation Tools by Category
| Category | Problem Solved | Leading Tools | Typical Cost | Time Saved / Close |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bank Reconciliation | Manual transaction matching, unmatched items backlog | BlackLine, ReconArt, NetSuite native | $500–$2,500/mo | 8–15 hrs |
| AP / Invoice | Late invoice entry, manual coding, approval delays | Bill.com, Tipalti, Stampli, AvidXchange | $300–$2,000/mo | 10–20 hrs |
| Expense Management | Late expense reports, accrual uncertainty | Ramp, Brex, Divvy, Concur | $0–$600/mo | 6–10 hrs |
| Revenue Recognition | Manual ASC 606 calculations, deferred revenue errors | Maxio, Chargebee RevRec, NetSuite ARM | $1,000–$4,000/mo | 10–20 hrs |
| Consolidation / Reporting | Multi-entity eliminations, manual report assembly | Workiva, OneStream, Vena, Planful | $2,000–$8,000/mo | 15–30 hrs |
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Building a Close Calendar
A close calendar is a shared, written document that specifies what happens on each day of the close cycle, who is responsible, and what the dependencies are. It is the operational backbone of a fast close, and most companies that lack one cannot explain why their close takes as long as it does because nobody has mapped the process.
Designing the Calendar
Start by listing every close task, estimating how long each takes, and identifying which tasks must complete before others can begin. Bank reconciliations must complete before the controller can sign off on cash. Revenue recognition must complete before deferred revenue journal entries can be posted. This dependency mapping reveals the critical path—the sequence of tasks that determines the earliest possible close date. Close time is reduced by either shortening tasks on the critical path (through automation) or by moving tasks off the critical path entirely (by completing them before month end).
Soft Close vs. Hard Close
A soft close (also called a flash close) is a preliminary close completed within 1–3 business days of month end, using estimates for items not yet finalized. The soft close produces a P&L that is 95%+ accurate and allows management to see results quickly. The hard close, completed by day 5, finalizes all entries and produces the official financial statements. Many companies send a flash report to the CEO and CFO on day 3 with preliminary results, then deliver final statements on day 5. This separation reduces pressure on the close team and gives management faster visibility.
To design a flash report: identify the 8–10 metrics that management reviews first (revenue by segment, gross margin, operating expense by function, EBITDA, cash balance). These can typically be estimated with 95%+ accuracy by day 2 because the revenue and COGS subledgers are usually finalized first. The flash report delivers these early; the full package follows on the hard close date.
Continuous Improvement
The best close processes are not static—they improve over time through deliberate retrospective review. Build two practices into your close rhythm:
Quarterly Close Retrospective
After every third close, hold a 30-minute team meeting to review: What took longer than expected? What issues were discovered late? What manual steps could be automated or front-loaded? Assign owners and timelines to any improvement items. Over 12 months, this discipline can reduce close time by 30%–50% without major technology investment—simply by eliminating recurring friction points that everyone tolerates but nobody fixes.
Close Scorecard
Track three close metrics every month and review them in the retrospective:
- Days-to-close: The business day on which the controller signed off on final financial statements. Track this month over month and set a target (e.g., "achieve day-5 close by Q3").
- Restatement frequency: The number of journal entries posted after the close was signed off. A high restatement rate indicates that the close process is not catching errors before sign-off—a process or review quality problem.
- Audit adjustment rate: The number and dollar value of adjustments proposed by external auditors that were not already identified internally. A high audit adjustment rate means your internal close process is missing things that should be caught before the auditors arrive.
Key Takeaways
- The monthly close is not just a reporting exercise—it is the foundation of decision-making quality, lender compliance, and audit readiness. Treat it as a strategic priority, not an administrative task.
- World-class close targets: 3–5 days for most mid-market companies. The gap between a 5-day and 15-day close is almost always process design and automation, not effort.
- The eight most common bottlenecks are bank reconciliations, intercompany eliminations, expense report lag, revenue recognition, fixed assets, accrual estimates, AP cutoff, and inventory valuation. Address each with a specific process or automation fix.
- A written close checklist with assigned owners and deadlines is the single most impactful low-cost improvement most finance teams can make.
- Automate in this order for greatest ROI: expense management first (eliminates accrual uncertainty), then AP automation (eliminates cutoff problems), then bank reconciliation automation, then revenue recognition (critical for ASC 606 complexity), then consolidation (for multi-entity companies).
- The soft close / flash report model gives management faster visibility and removes pressure from the hard close process.
- Run quarterly close retrospectives and track three metrics: days-to-close, restatement frequency, and audit adjustment rate. Improvement requires measurement.
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