Accounting Glossary

Financial Consolidations

What is the Financial Consolidation Process?

Financial consolidations involve aggregating financial data from subsidiaries, departments, or business entities into a single set of financial statements for a parent company. This process helps organizations show a complete picture of their financial performance and position. 

Typically, financial consolidation requires gathering financial information from different entities while removing intercompany transactions. This ensures that revenues, expenses, assets, and liabilities are not counted twice. The outcome is a consolidated set of financial statements that displays the organization's financial results as a single economic entity.

Core Applications

The financial consolidation process is often used by organizations that have multiple legal entities or business units. Financial consolidations allow companies to present stakeholders with a clear and complete picture of their financial performance. Typical applications include:

  • Combining financial data from subsidiaries into parent-company reports
  • Preparing consolidated financial statements for external reporting
  • Eliminating intercompany transactions between entities
  • Standardizing financial reporting across business units
  • Supporting regulatory and audit requirements for multi-entity organizations


Key Steps in the Financial Consolidation Process

The consolidation process generally follows several structured steps.

  1. Collect financial data
    Each subsidiary or entity submits its financial data for the reporting period.
  2. Standardize account structures
    Account mappings ensure that financial information is consistent across entities.
  3. Eliminate intercompany transactions
    Transactions between subsidiaries are removed to prevent duplication.
  4. Aggregate financial information
    All entities’ balances are combined into consolidated totals.
  5. Prepare consolidated financial statements
    The organization produces unified financial statements for reporting and analysis.


Why It Matters for Accountants

Financial consolidations are vital for organizations with complex structures or several operating entities. Without a clear consolidation process, companies face issues such as inconsistent reporting, duplicate transactions, and unreliable financial results. For accounting teams, a well-managed financial consolidation process ensures accurate financial reporting as organizations grow and expand across different units.

Benefits of effective financial consolidations include:

  • Reliable consolidated financial statements for stakeholders
  • Improved visibility across subsidiaries and business units
  • Reduced reporting errors from inconsistent financial data
  • More efficient close processes for accounting teams

See notes from our webinar on connecting your financial close process, from record to report