Avoiding the most common audit adjustments

The Most Common Audit Adjustments - and How to Prevent Them

December 15, 20253 min read

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.

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