
The Most Common Audit Adjustments - and How to Prevent Them
You’ve made it through the audit. The report is almost ready.
Then the auditor sends a list of adjusting journal entries (AJEs):
A receivable wasn’t recorded
A grant reimbursement was duplicated
Capital asset depreciation was missed
Fund balances are off
Payroll accruals need to be fixed
Sound familiar?
Most audit adjustments are avoidable—with the right prep, process, and awareness.
Here’s a look at the most common audit adjustments in government entities—and how to prevent them before your next audit season.
1. Missed or Incomplete Accruals
📉 What gets adjusted:
Payroll accrued into the wrong period
Unpaid vendor invoices not accrued at year-end
Receivables missing from grant or tax revenue
🛠️ How to prevent it:
Create a year-end closing checklist that includes common accruals
Review prior-year AJEs for recurring entries
Request and review final payroll reports and AP aging as of year-end
Confirm grant reimbursements earned but not yet received
Pro tip: If it hits cash after year-end but was earned or incurred before—it's likely an accrual.
2. Duplicate Grant Revenues or Expenses
📉 What gets adjusted:
Grant expenses recorded twice (once during drawdown, once in accounts payable)
Revenues recorded when reimbursement was submitted—not earned
🛠️ How to prevent it:
Reconcile each grant’s expenditures to the general ledger
Track drawdowns and match them to actual allowable costs
Record revenues only when earned—not just when received or billed
Use a SEFA tracking sheet throughout the year to stay audit-ready
Grant programs are a top audit focus—especially in single audits. Accuracy matters.
3. Capital Assets Not Updated or Depreciated
📉 What gets adjusted:
New purchases not added to the capital asset schedule
Disposals not removed
Depreciation not recorded at year-end
🛠️ How to prevent it:
Maintain a capital asset rollforward year-round
Save invoices and categorize them by asset type
Review prior-year schedules and reconcile additions/disposals
Use a depreciation template or software to calculate year-end entries
Pro tip: Even if the client doesn’t maintain full GAAP books, your audit file should reflect GAAP-ready capital asset info.
4. Debt Principal and Interest Misclassified
📉 What gets adjusted:
Principal payments recorded as expense instead of debt reduction
Interest amounts miscoded or missing
Bond premiums or deferred amounts not amortized
🛠️ How to prevent it:
Reconcile all debt payments to amortization schedules
Break out principal vs. interest clearly
Review prior-year disclosures and update with current activity
Confirm debt service funds tie to GL and trial balance
Debt schedules are low volume but high risk—clean tie-outs save hours.
5. Fund Balance Classifications Are Incorrect
📉 What gets adjusted:
Restricted or committed balances not properly tracked
Assigned fund balances overstated or duplicated
Unassigned fund balance off due to missing entries
🛠️ How to prevent it:
Track restricted/committed purposes throughout the year
Review board actions for fund designations
Reconcile total fund balance to prior year plus net activity
Use a worksheet to break out GASB 54 classifications before year-end
Fund balance is the story your audit tells. Make sure it reflects your policies.
6. Reclassifying Accounts for Financial Statement Presentation
📉 What gets adjusted:
Revenues or expenditures posted to the wrong category
Internal balances not eliminated in government-wide statements
Interfund activity misclassified
🛠️ How to prevent it:
Review GL codes and map them to final FS line items
Flag internal transfers and due to/from early in the prep process
Keep your chart of accounts aligned with financial statement headings
These aren’t always “errors”—but cleaning them up early makes reporting easier.
Adjustments Don’t Make You a Bad Bookkeeper—But Fewer of Them Make You a Better Partner
Audit adjustments aren’t personal. But they do reflect how prepared and organized your records are before audit season begins.
✅ Use last year’s AJEs as a roadmap
✅ Build templates for accruals, SEFA, assets, and debt
✅ Tie out every major balance to support
✅ Ask your auditor early if something doesn’t look right
Because the goal isn’t just a clean audit—it’s a process that gets cleaner every year.
