For property managers
Close the books for a period
Closing the books locks past records so a finished period cannot be changed by mistake. It is the standard accounting control that makes a month, quarter, or year final once you have reported it.
What closing the books does
When you close the books through a day, every money entry dated on or before that day is locked. After that, a charge, payment, expense, or import dated in the closed period can no longer be added or changed. Anything dated after the lock is still open and works as normal.
The lock checks the date the money belongs to, not the day you typed it in. For an expense that is the receipt date, for rent that is the due date. So back-dating an entry into a closed period is refused too, not just editing an existing one.
Closing does not change any number. It only protects the records you already have.
How to close the books
- Open Close the books from the Money area.
- Pick the day to close through (for a year end, the last day of the year).
- Select Close the books. The status changes to "Closed through" that day.
Only an account owner can close or re-open the books. Other roles can see the status.
What happens if someone tries to change a closed record
They get a clear message that the period is closed, and the change is refused. Nothing is saved. To make a real correction, either record it in the current open period, or re-open the books first (see "Re-open a closed period").
Good to know
- The daily rent-charge generator skips any month that is closed, so it never posts into a locked period.
- Every close and re-open is recorded in the audit trail with who did it and when. See "The audit trail".
- This is tooling, not accounting advice. Close a period once your accountant has reviewed it.
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