Accounting Glossary

Intercompany Transactions

What are Intercompany Transactions?

Intercompany transactions are financial activities between entities within the same corporate group, such as subsidiaries and the parent company. These transactions can include the sale of goods or services, internal loans, cost allocations, or asset transfers between related entities.

Although these transactions are legitimate operational activities, they must be carefully tracked through intercompany accounting because they occur within the same organization. When preparing consolidated financial statements, companies must identify and adjust internal transactions to avoid overstatement of revenue, expenses, assets, or liabilities.

Core Applications

Organizations with multiple subsidiaries commonly rely on structured intercompany accounting to track and manage intercompany transactions. These activities help organizations allocate costs and resources internally while maintaining accurate accounting records. Typical examples include:

  • Sales of goods or services between subsidiaries and the parent company
  • Internal loans that create intercompany balances between entities
  • Cost allocations for shared services such as IT or administrative support
  • Transfers of inventory or assets across business units
  • Internal management fees or royalty payments


Common Types of Intercompany Transactions

The management of intercompany transactions often involves several categories of internal activity. Proper tracking and reconciliation of these transactions helps maintain accurate intercompany balances and supports reliable reporting.

- Intercompany sales and purchases

Subsidiaries may sell products or services to other entities within the same corporate group.

- Intercompany loans and financing

Internal lending arrangements between subsidiaries or with the parent company create intercompany balances that must be tracked.

- Cost allocations

Shared operational costs may be distributed across entities using internal accounting entries.

- Asset transfers

Equipment, inventory, or other assets may move between entities within the organization.



Why It Matters for Accountants

Managing intercompany transactions effectively is essential for organizations that operate multiple subsidiaries. Without proper oversight, intercompany balances can become inconsistent and complicate the preparation of consolidated financial statements.

Benefits of strong intercompany accounting practices include:

  • Accurate tracking of transactions between entities
  • Reliable reconciliation of intercompany balances
  • Clear financial reporting across subsidiaries and the parent company
  • Efficient preparation of consolidated financial statements

For accounting teams, maintaining consistent processes for recording and reconciling intercompany transactions helps ensure financial data remains accurate across the entire organization.

Learn how FloQast helps streamline Intercompany Accounting here