Intercompany eliminations are accounting adjustments used to remove intercompany transactions between subsidiaries or related entities within the same corporate group. These adjustments are necessary when preparing consolidated financial statements to present the organization as a single economic entity.
Without intercompany eliminations, transactions between subsidiaries could be counted more than once. For example, if one subsidiary sells goods to another, both the revenue and the expense would appear in the combined financial records. The elimination process removes these internal transactions, so the consolidated reports only reflect activity with external parties.
Intercompany eliminations are commonly required in organizations with multiple subsidiaries or business units that transact with each other. These adjustments prevent internal activity from distorting consolidated financial results. Typical applications include:
The intercompany eliminations process typically includes several types of adjustments designed to remove internal activity between related entities. These adjustments ensure that consolidated financial statements reflect only transactions with external parties rather than internal movements of revenue, expenses, assets, or balances within the organization.
Accurate intercompany eliminations are essential for organizations that operate through multiple subsidiaries. Without proper adjustments, internal activity could inflate revenue, expenses, or balances reported in consolidated financial statements. Key benefits include:
For accounting teams responsible for consolidation, managing intercompany eliminations helps ensure financial statements present a complete and accurate view of the organization’s financial position.