Intercompany Accounting

What Is Intercompany Accounting?

Intercompany accounting is the process of recording, reconciling, and eliminating financial transactions that occur between legal entities within the same corporate group. These transactions—including loans, cost allocations, and intercompany sales—must balance across entities before consolidated financial statements can be produced.

Without automation, intercompany accounting is one of the most error-prone and resource-intensive processes in the close cycle. For this reason, BlackLine's Intercompany solution is powered by AI agents to match, reconcile, and eliminate intercompany balances continuously, preventing errors before they are booked.

When Is Intercompany Accounting Performed?

Many businesses have divisions, subsidiaries, franchises, or other units that act independently, but are owned by the larger, parent company. For example, 3M—the office supply manufacturer—owns Scotch Tape, Post-It, Bondo, and several other manufacturers of popular office products.

However, not all intercompany scenarios involve large, international businesses. Many are also entirely domestic and operate on a smaller scale. For example, a lawn care company may spin off a smaller start-up to develop and sell a new line of grass seeds. The start-up will act independently but is owned by and receives financing from the parent company.

Any time an exchange of financial value takes place between any of the two entities in these scenarios, the transaction must be accounted for and ultimately reconciled. It cannot be overlooked or disregarded because the two entities are related.

How Is Intercompany Accounting Performed?

Intercompany reconciliation will look different depending on the business. For example, a large, multi-national corporation with subsidiaries around the globe will have a much different process for reconciling its intercompany transactions than a small, domestic company with one or two subsidiaries.

Intercompany transactions are recorded in different ways depending on the nature of the transaction. For example, if one subsidiary of a company sells inventory to another, the transaction will be recorded as an account receivable entry for the selling subsidiary and as an account payable for the purchasing subsidiary. If a parent company makes a loan to one of its subsidiaries, it will be recorded as an asset for the parent company and as a liability for the subsidiary. In either case, the transactions will be eliminated before the consolidated financial statement is prepared.

Intercompany transactions occur in one of three ways:

• Downstream transactions refer to transactions that originate from the parent company and are directed to one of its subsidiaries

• An upstream transaction is a financial activity that is directed from the subsidiary to the parent company

• Lateral transactions take place between two subsidiaries of the same parent company

In the process of intercompany accounting, it is vital that both parties accurately record the transaction and that they do so in a similar manner, using the same descriptive terms and values. This ensures that the transaction can be correctly recorded, processed, and eliminated by both entities.

Because intercompany transactions cannot be reported as a profit, they must be eliminated. They must cancel out, or equal zero, in the final accounting process. The parent business cannot have an intercompany transaction with a value greater than zero in the closing period statements.

The Growing Complexity & Intercompany Accounting Risk

Managing intercompany transactions can be labor-intensive and costly. Reconciling large volumes of data and tracing back errors to mitigate risk is often hampered by limited cross-entity visibility. Because it’s highly distributed, there can be fewer controls and lower accountability.

Correctly classifying profits across countries requires following specific local tax laws and transfer pricing agreements. Regulatory authorities are requiring country-by-country reporting and access to detailed transactions in order to avoid significant fines and fees.

Cumulatively, they can drain valuable finance, accounting, tax and treasury resources, create redundant work and outstanding balances, and elevate exposure risk.

In fact, per Audit Analytics, intercompany issues were the fifth highest reason for restatement, and in the top quartile between 2001 and 2014.

Frequently Asked Questions