Parkins Financial, LLC

Audit Readiness & Review Support: Your Guide to a Stress-Free Season

Audit Readiness & Review Support: Your Guide to a Stress-Free Season February 16, 2026 February brings more than Valentine’s Day and busy tax deadlines — for thousands of businesses, nonprofits, and construction companies, it marks the beginning of audit and review season. This is the time of year when CPAs request financial statements, auditors ask for schedules, funders demand supporting documentation, and bonding companies want updated Work-In-Progress reports. And far too often, it’s the time when business owners realize: The books aren’t clean. Key schedules aren’t ready. Supporting documentation is missing. And what should have been a routine review turns into a scramble. At Parkins Financial, we help organizations avoid this last-minute panic through proactive audit readiness and review support. Whether you’re a nonprofit preparing for a Uniform Guidance audit, a construction firm supporting year-end financial reviews, or a small business undergoing a lender-required compilation, the goal is the same: Clean books. Clear documentation. Confident results. Let’s break down how to prepare for your audit or review, what auditors really look for, and the steps you can take to ensure a smooth, stress-free season. 1️⃣ What Does “Audit Readiness” Actually Mean? Audit readiness is more than reconciling accounts or organizing receipts. It means your financials, systems, controls, and supporting documentation are complete, accurate, and easy to verify. True audit readiness includes: Fully reconciled accounts Accurate balances Clean vendor & customer data Proper classification of income & expenses Internal controls and approval processes Timely financial statements Organized documentation for all major transactions Auditors aren’t looking for perfection — they’re looking for consistency, accuracy, and clarity. The better your internal accounting processes, the fewer questions you’ll face. 2️⃣ Audits vs Reviews: What’s the Difference? Many organizations misunderstand the difference between these engagements — and that leads to confusion, stress, and unnecessary costs. ✔ Audit: The most in-depth level of assurance.Auditors evaluate your systems, test transactions, review supporting documentation, and verify accuracy. Audits are required for: Many nonprofits (especially those receiving federal or state funding) Construction firms with certain bonding requirements Businesses needing assurance for banks or investors ✔ Review: A review is narrower in scope. It involves analytical procedures and inquiries, but limited transaction testing. Reviews are common for: Construction industry financial statement submissions Mid-sized businesses preparing lender packages Nonprofits not required to undergo a full audit Either way — clean books and organized data reduce your CPA bill and save weeks of frustration. 3️⃣ Why February Is the Perfect Time to Prepare By February, you usually have: Year-end data available Bank statements for December Payroll summaries and tax forms Grant year or fiscal year results The earlier you start preparing, the easier your audit (or review) will be. Proactive preparation allows your CPA to: Spot inconsistencies Identify prior-period adjustments Prepare financial statements faster Reduce time spent on cleanup and backtracking This translates to lower costs, fewer delays, and cleaner final reports. 4️⃣ The Parkins Financial Audit-Ready Checklist Here’s our proven process for preparing clients across nonprofit, construction, and small business sectors. Follow these steps to streamline your audit or review: 🔹 Step 1: Reconcile Every Account This includes: Bank accounts Credit cards Payroll liabilities Loans and lines of credit Merchant processing accounts Retainage receivable/payable (for construction) Restricted cash accounts (for nonprofits) Your auditor will always start with reconciliations — if they don’t tie out, the rest of the audit becomes much harder. 🔹 Step 2: Clean Up Your Balance Sheet Most audit issues occur here. Ensure: A/R aging is accurate A/P aging reflects true balances All stale balances are cleared Prepaids and fixed assets are updated Deferred revenue is properly recorded For nonprofits: Check that restricted and unrestricted funds match supporting schedules. For construction firms: Ensure retainage and WIP align with contract documents. 🔹 Step 3: Organize Supporting Documentation Auditors may request: Invoices Receipts Contracts Bank statements Payroll reports Grant award letters Loan documents Board minutes Insurance policies Organized documentation = lower audit costs. 🔹 Step 4: Prepare Key Schedules Before the Auditor Asks This is where Parkins Financial provides tremendous value. Prepare: Accounts receivable summary Accounts payable detail WIP schedules Retainage schedules Fixed asset roll-forwards Grant expenditure reports Budget vs actual variance reports When these schedules are ready, auditors complete their work significantly faster. 🔹 Step 5: Review Internal Controls Every auditor evaluates your internal processes, including: Expense approvals Check signing authority Segregation of duties Payroll reviews Documentation of policies Even if controls are simple, they must be clear and consistent. 🔹 Step 6: Perform a Pre-Audit Trial Balance Review Review: Large variances New accounts Duplicate or unusual transactions Negative balances Uncategorized entries Old uncleared transactions Fix these issues before auditors flag them. 🔹 Step 7: Communicate with Your CPA Early This includes: Deadlines Deliverables Formatting requirements Expectations around timing Potential problem areas The more proactive you are, the smoother the process. 5️⃣ Common Audit Pain Points — and How to Avoid Them ❌ Incomplete payroll allocation Solution: Automate job or grant coding in QBO. ❌ Missing receipts Solution: Use Dext, Ramp, or Bill.com to capture documentation instantly. ❌ Incorrect revenue recognition Solution: Map income properly for programs, grants, or contracts. ❌ Disorganized chart of accounts Solution: Rebuild the COA to match industry requirements. ❌ WIP not tied to financials Solution: Use standardized WIP templates and monthly updates. 6️⃣ How Automation Strengthens Audit Readiness Automation reduces the errors auditors flag most. Automate: Bank feeds Expense coding Timesheets and payroll allocations Receipt capture Recurring journal entries Grant or job tracking fields Financial reporting dashboards Automation = consistency = audit success. 7️⃣ Why Outsourced Audit Support Saves Time and Money Audit season shouldn’t derail your operations. Parkins Financial provides: Pre-audit cleanup Schedule preparation Documentation organization Auditor communication Review support Post-audit adjustment entries We speak both “accounting” and “auditor” — making us the perfect liaison between your team and your CPA. Our clients consistently report: Fewer audit adjustments Lower CPA bills Faster turnaround time Less staff stress Stronger financial systems That’s the power of proactive audit readiness. 8️⃣ The Parkins Financial Advantage

Fresh Start: Clean Books, Clear Roadmap

Struggling to track cash in your construction business? Learn how to forecast, manage retainage, and build a 13-week cash flow plan with Parkins Financial.