Glossary · bank reconciliation
Bank reconciliation, defined.
Bank reconciliation is the accounting procedure that proves the books against the bank's own record: every transaction in the books matched to the bank statement, every difference explained, until the two agree to the penny. It's the only routine step in bookkeeping that tests the books against a document the business can't edit — which is why "reconciled" is the word CPAs and lenders listen for. Everything else in a set of books is a claim; the reconciliation is where claims get checked. Done monthly, it ends in a difference of exactly $0.00 — reached honestly, not forced.
Updated July 2026 · Definition first, then what "reconciled" does and doesn't mean.
The term in one breath
What it is
The books tested line by line against the bank's independent record, until the difference is $0.00 — with every gap explained.
What healthy looks like
Every bank and credit-card account reconciled to its statement monthly, and the month locked once it's proven.
What it isn't
Accepting bank-feed matches. A feed files what the bank sent; a reconciliation proves nothing was missed, duplicated, or invented.
The concept
Why one procedure carries the whole idea of "books you can trust."
Books are self-referential: entries describe money, reports summarize entries, and nothing inside that loop can catch what never got entered. The bank statement breaks the loop — it's a record of the same money kept by a party with no stake in how the books look. Reconciliation is the formal act of standing the two records against each other: start from the statement, account for every line on it, explain every book entry that isn't on it, and don't stop until the difference is zero — the discipline our reconciliation guide names the Statement-First Rule. What falls out of that confrontation is everything a feed can't see: the deposit that never arrived, the payment entered twice, the check recorded at $970 that cleared at $790, the bank fee nobody entered, the withdrawal nobody recognizes.
The word carries weight in both directions. A reconciled month is provable — which is why "reconciled through" a date functions as the books' CPA-Ready Threshold in practice. An unreconciled stretch compounds quietly: each unproven month makes the next one harder to prove, the failure mode our cost guide names Compounding Reconciliation Drift. That's why a reconciliation backlog is treated as a defined repair job rather than a to-do item — and why the monthly reconciliation is the load-bearing line of every month-end close.
Reading the claims
What it sounds like, versus what it proves.
| The claim | What it actually proves | The tell |
|---|---|---|
| "The bank feed is all matched" | Everything the bank sent got filed somewhere. Nothing about completeness, duplicates, or entries the bank never saw. | Ask when each account was last reconciled to a statement — a feed has no statement date. |
| "The balances agree today" | A snapshot coincidence. Two offsetting errors agree just as happily as two clean records. | Agreement without a line-by-line match is luck, not proof — it dissolves the day one error surfaces. |
| "Reconciled through March 31" | The real thing: every statement line accounted for, every difference explained, month by month, up to that date. | There's a reconciliation report for each account, each month — and it can be produced on request. |
| "We adjusted it to balance" | The difference was absorbed into a plug entry, not explained. The proof was spent to make the number behave. | Adjustment entries dated at reconciliation time — each one is a question mark wearing a period. |
| "Every account, every month, to zero" | The healthy state: bank and credit-card accounts proven on a rhythm, differences resolved while they're still small. | Reconciliation reports run wall-to-wall with no skipped months — and the close locks each one behind itself. |
The six-step method behind the honest version — statement first, difference to zero, no forcing — is the QuickBooks Online reconciliation walkthrough.
Related terms
Where this term connects.
Month-end close — the monthly gate whose proof step this is · Undeposited Funds — the holding account that quietly breaks deposit matching · The Statement-First Rule — our owned framework: the statement is the truth the books get proven against.
Months of accounts nobody's proven? The free review reads your reconciliation history and says plainly where the proof stops — and what re-establishing it costs, fixed-fee.
Free books assessmentBank reconciliation FAQ · Updated July 2026
The definitional questions.
Accounts that won't reconcile are usually a symptom of a bigger file problem — that's cleanup territory, diagnostic first. Which repair job is yours: the scope quiz.
Keep reading
The proof disciplines behind the term.
How to reconcile in QuickBooks Online
The six-step walkthrough — statement first, every difference explained, and a real $0.00 at the end.
Keep readingHow to read financial statements
The Tie-Out lives here — proving the statements against each other, the way reconciliation proves cash against the bank.
Keep reading