You’re three calls in. The founder is polished, the pitch deck is tight, and the model says the deal works. Then you get access to the numbers and find a month-end close held together by spreadsheets, stale accruals, and a controller who cannot explain cash movement without changing the subject. That is how bad acquisitions start.
I’ve seen buyers fall in love with the story and pay for problems they never priced in. A due diligence checklist m&a process exists to stop that. Your job is to find the financial landmines before they become your problem after closing.
Start with the money. Start early. And bring in people who know how to tear books apart without slowing the deal to a crawl. If the target does not have a real finance bench, use outsourced accounting talent to rebuild the reporting logic, test the close process, and separate clean earnings from founder optimism. That step saves deals. It also kills the ones that deserve to die.
Serious buyers usually request several years of financial records, tax filings, contracts, and supporting schedules before they trust a single conclusion. The point is simple. You need enough history to spot pattern breaks, cleanup jobs, and earnings that only look good because someone deferred pain until after the sale. If you want a sharper standard for what clean reporting should look like, use these financial reporting best practices as a gut check while you review the target’s numbers.
Financial diligence also tells you whether the company can produce the truth on command. That matters more than founders admit. A business with weak controls, slow closes, and unexplained adjustments will waste your time in diligence and your cash after closing.
Read this alongside this guide on due diligence for SaaS founders if software revenue, deferred income, or subscription metrics are part of the story.
Here, “minor discrepancies” often become major pain.
You’re two weeks into a deal, management says the numbers are clean, and then the trial balance stops tying to the board deck. Now you are not buying growth. You are buying a cleanup project.
That is why financial records and accounting systems go first.
You need audited and unaudited financials, balance sheets, income statements, cash flow statements, budgets, forecasts, audit support, bank reconciliations, and general ledger detail for several years. A single strong year proves nothing. You are looking for pattern breaks, last-minute reclasses, margin swings nobody can explain, and earnings that only exist because someone shoved costs into the future.

The true test is simple. Can this company produce accurate numbers quickly, consistently, and with a clear trail back to source data? If the answer is no, every other diligence workstream gets harder and every post-close integration gets more expensive.
I care less about polished reports than I do about how the reports were built. A SaaS company can post pretty margins while revenue is timed wrong. A product business can hit forecast while inventory and COGS are held together with spreadsheet patches. Founders miss this because they stare at outcomes. Buyers need to inspect the machinery.
Start with the close process. Ask who closes the books, how long it takes, what gets reconciled monthly, and which entries are posted after management already reviewed results. If they cannot walk you from transaction to ledger to financial statement without confusion, assume the statements need work.
Then get specific:
If management says operations are clean, compare what they do against these financial reporting best practices. The gap tells you whether you are buying a finance system or inheriting a monthly scramble.
Outsourced accounting talent justifies its cost. A good outsourced team does not just organize files in a data room. They rebuild the reporting logic, test reconciliations, trace unusual entries, and tell you whether EBITDA is real or dressed up for sale. Founder to founder, that work pays for itself the first time it exposes a bad close process before you sign the LOI.
You sign the LOI on Friday. On Monday, your diligence team finds three years of unpaid sales tax exposure, late payroll filings, and a contractor roster that should have been on payroll the whole time. That is how a clean deal turns into a price cut, an escrow fight, or a dead transaction.
Tax diligence is not paperwork review. It is a search for liabilities the seller either missed, ignored, or kept alive with quarterly excuses. Get every return, notice, audit response, payroll filing, sales and use tax report, and any correspondence with tax authorities. Go wide on jurisdictions too. Federal is only part of the problem. State, local, and foreign filings usually hide the uglier surprises.
Founders get burned here because growth creates tax exposure faster than the finance team matures. An e-commerce business ships into new states and forgets nexus. A SaaS company bills customers abroad and creates VAT headaches nobody tracked. A startup pays people as contractors because it was fast, then acts shocked when an agency disagrees. If you need a refresher on how contract terms affect timing and obligations, review the basics of revenue recognition in accounting before you trust any tax position tied to booked revenue.
Start with the ugly questions.
Do filed returns tie to the financial statements and payroll reports, or are there unexplained gaps? Do the state registrations match where the company sells, hires, stores inventory, or has remote employees? Are there recurring notices, amended returns, or catch-up filings? Repetition matters. One mistake is a mistake. The same mistake every quarter is a broken process.
I’d press hard on these points:
Who handles tax tells you a lot. If the company relies on a once-a-year preparer who shows up in March and disappears in April, you do not have a tax function. You have annual form production. That setup misses nexus changes, payroll issues, and filing breakdowns until the notices start arriving.
Tax debt hurts. Tax uncertainty hurts more. Buyers can price a known liability. They punish uncertainty because nobody wants to inherit a problem that keeps spreading after close.
This is one of the clearest places to use outsourced accounting talent properly. A good outsourced tax and accounting team will rebuild the filing calendar, trace filings back to the ledger, test nexus against actual operations, and estimate exposure before the seller’s story hardens into “normal.” That work strengthens your position where it counts. Price adjustment, indemnity, escrow, or a decision to walk away before you buy someone else’s tax mess.
Revenue is where sellers get poetic. Cash collection is where poetry dies.
The due diligence checklist m&a process gets painfully real. You’re not just checking top-line numbers. You’re checking whether revenue was earned properly, billed properly, and collected on something resembling a sane timeline. Financial diligence in M&A typically includes analysis of historical performance over the last 3 years, with close attention to revenue by customer, product, geography, channel, and pricing. Good. That’s exactly where bad surprises hide.

If one customer accounts for too much of the revenue story, you’ve got concentration risk. If deferred revenue is messy, you may not even know what has been earned yet. If the AR aging report looks like a graveyard of old promises, that “strong revenue base” is just unpaid optimism.
Many founders become complacent at this point. Don’t.
Customer contracts tell you whether revenue timing makes sense. Subscription deals, implementation fees, usage charges, milestone billing, annual prepaids, credits, renewals, side letters. All of it matters. If you need a fast primer to align finance and deal teams, use this explainer on revenue recognition in accounting.
A few things I’d demand right away:
A company can survive slow growth. It rarely survives fake clarity around revenue.
The right accountant here is part detective, part translator. You want someone who can rebuild normalized revenue, test billing patterns, and tell you whether sales booked business or merely booked hope.
Sellers love talking about customers. Buyers should spend more time with vendors than they think.
Accounts payable tells you how the business behaves under pressure. Late payments, disputes, one-off manual workarounds, weird vendor dependencies. That’s operating reality, not pitch deck reality. If the target can’t manage what it owes, post-close cash planning gets ugly fast.
A startup with scattered card charges and no approval flow usually leaves a trail. A manufacturer might depend on a tiny group of suppliers for critical inputs. An e-commerce brand can look lean until you realize vendor terms are carrying the business harder than management is.
Pull the AP aging. Then read the largest vendor agreements and match terms to payment behavior. If contracts say net terms but the books show chronic delays, somebody is financing the business informally and implicitly.

Here’s the short list I care about most:
If the process feels patched together, compare it against solid accounts payable process best practices. You’ll know quickly whether the team is disciplined or improvising.
A capable outsourced bookkeeper or accounting manager can clean AP faster than most founders expect. More important, they can tell you whether the mess is operational, cultural, or both.
Debt has a nasty sense of humor. It looks manageable right up until a covenant breach, a consent requirement, or a change-of-control clause walks into the room.
Get every loan agreement. Every promissory note. Every line of credit, equipment lease, venture debt instrument, convertible note, and side letter. Then build a debt schedule yourself or have someone you trust do it. Never rely on management’s “summary” without backup.
A growing company can miss a covenant because EBITDA got adjusted too aggressively. A startup can forget that venture debt includes warrants with real consequences. A small business can have three separate financing arrangements secured by assets management barely tracks.
The ugly part of debt diligence is also the useful part. Read the definitions sections. Seriously. “EBITDA” in a lender agreement does not always mean what management means in the board deck.
Focus on these points:
Also ask who manages lender reporting today. If nobody owns it cleanly, expect reporting gaps and documentation drama.
If debt terms are complicated, model the downside first. Optimism is not a repayment strategy.
An outsourced finance lead or CPA with transaction experience can save weeks. They’ll untangle the instruments, rebuild covenant math, and tell you whether the capital structure is workable or just temporarily quiet.
Inventory can flatter a business for months. Then it shows up all at once as write-downs, margin pain, and a warehouse full of regrets.
If the company sells physical products, inspect inventory valuation, count procedures, aging, returns, and how COGS gets assigned. I don’t care how good the dashboard looks. If nobody can reconcile units, value, and gross margin by product line, you’re buying uncertainty in boxes.
An e-commerce operator might be carrying stale stock at full value because nobody wants to admit demand shifted. A product company can bury freight, packaging, or warranty costs in the wrong places and call the gross margin “temporary.” A retailer can suffer shrinkage and only discover it after quarter-end cleanup.
Start with the last physical count and the reconciliation to the ledger. Then trace a sample of products from purchase to sale to return. If that sounds annoying, good. It should.
A few blunt checks help fast:
Don’t forget supplier concentration here either. If one vendor controls a key input and terms tighten after the acquisition, your “stable COGS” assumption can collapse without warning.
For product-heavy deals, outsourced accounting talent with inventory experience is worth far more than another spreadsheet jockey. You need someone who can walk the warehouse logic and the general ledger logic without getting lost in either.
Fixed assets are where old accounting sins go to hide.
Ask for the fixed asset register, depreciation schedules, capitalization policy, leasehold improvement support, disposal history, and maintenance records for anything meaningful. Then compare the list to what exists. You’d be amazed how often the register includes ghosts, misses real assets, or treats repairs like capital investment because someone wanted a nicer quarter.
Manufacturing businesses are obvious candidates for this problem, but startups are not innocent. I’ve seen companies capitalize software inconsistently, lose track of laptops across locations, and carry build-out costs with very fuzzy useful lives. “We’ll sort it after close” is how buyers inherit a balance sheet cleanup project disguised as an acquisition.
The fixed asset rollforward should tie to the financials. If it doesn’t, the depreciation expense may be wrong, tax treatment may be wrong, and book value may be fiction.
I’d zero in on:
This area gets dismissed because it feels technical and boring. Fine. So is replacing misvalued assets after close.
A strong accounting manager can rebuild the register, clean depreciation logic, and separate tax treatment from management reporting. That’s not glamorous work. It’s still the kind that protects purchase price.
Most bad surprises don’t start as line items. They start as half-known obligations nobody wanted to quantify yet.
You need the accrued liabilities detail, legal letters where available, reserve calculations, deferred revenue schedules, customer deposits, warranty obligations, severance commitments, and any list of known disputes. If management says, “Nothing material,” ask them to define material, then ask for documents.
A software company can carry support or refund obligations with no real reserve logic. A retailer can have pending disputes that sit in email threads instead of the books. A manufacturer can have environmental or compliance exposure that accounting never captured because legal was “handling it.”
Accruals are judgment calls, which means they’re fertile ground for optimism. You need to test completeness, not just arithmetic.
Look closely at:
The absence of a reserve doesn't mean the absence of a liability. It often means nobody wanted the argument yet.
This is prime territory for outsourced senior accountants who know how to ask the annoying follow-up question. The first answer is rarely the useful one.
Cap tables can go from “pretty straightforward” to “who signed this?” in about ten minutes.
Get the current capitalization table, all shareholder agreements, stock option records, board approvals, vesting schedules, SAFE or convertible documents, warrant agreements, and anything tied to preferences or anti-dilution. Then reconcile them. Don’t assume the cap table software is correct just because it has a clean interface.
Founder-led businesses often have informal history. Early grants might lack proper approvals. Option paperwork can be incomplete. Convertible instruments might convert differently than management assumes. Preferred equity terms can change the economics of the deal in ways that don’t show up in the first draft of the model.
The cap table isn’t just a legal artifact. It affects proceeds, control, approvals, and whether your deal closes without a sideshow.
I’d check these areas hard:
If there are side arrangements with former founders, advisors, or family members, drag them into daylight now. Hidden understandings have a terrible habit of becoming very visible near closing.
Outsourced financial analysts and controllers can help translate legal complexity into deal math. That matters because “we think this is the diluted number” is not something you want to say in front of counsel or investors.
People pretend legal and financial diligence are separate. They’re not. Contracts create money obligations all the time.
Review material customer contracts, supplier agreements, leases, employment contracts, insurance policies, licenses, permits, privacy obligations, and any contract with change-of-control language. Also review how those obligations hit the books. A contract can be legally valid and still accounted for badly. That’s how post-close pain arrives wearing a legal stamp.
A SaaS company may have privacy and service commitments that create compliance costs nobody modeled. A services business may owe credits, penalties, or performance obligations buried in master agreements. An e-commerce brand may operate under licenses that need renewal, transfer, or consent when ownership changes.
I care less about whether the contract binder is complete and more about whether someone has read the dangerous parts.
Focus on:
If compliance obligations are material, pull in an accountant who understands how contracts affect reserves, revenue timing, and disclosure. Legal can tell you what the words mean. Finance has to tell you what those words cost.
| Assessment Area | Implementation complexity | Resource requirements | Expected outcomes | Ideal use cases | Key advantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Financial Records and Accounting Systems Review | Moderate–High: multi-year analysis and system assessment | Accountants/CPA, ledger access, time for reconciliation | Verified historical financials; system gaps identified; baseline metrics | M&A, scaling startups, system migrations | Reveals financial health; informs hiring and system fixes |
| Tax Compliance and Regulatory Obligations | High: multi-jurisdictional and regulatory complexity | Tax specialists, past returns, legal coordination | Identified tax liabilities; compliance plan; specialist needs | E‑commerce, SaaS, multi-state/international operations | Prevents hidden liabilities; clarifies tax obligations |
| Accounts Receivable and Revenue Recognition | Moderate–High: contract and ASC 606 considerations | AR reports, customer contracts, revenue expertise | Accurate revenue recognition; cash conversion insights; collection issues | SaaS/subscriptions, B2B contract billing, recurring revenue | Improves cash flow visibility; ensures revenue compliance |
| Accounts Payable and Vendor Management | Moderate: process and vendor analysis | AP aging, vendor contracts, AP specialist/bookkeeper | Clear cash obligations; payment timing optimization; vendor risks | Manufacturing, companies with many suppliers, startups | Identifies payment inefficiencies; negotiation opportunities |
| Debt Obligations and Loan Agreements | High: covenants and convertible features require review | Loan documents, financial modeling, debt/CPA expertise | Comprehensive debt schedule; covenant compliance status; refinancing plan | Companies with bank debt, venture debt, convertible notes | Clarifies liabilities and covenant risk; informs cash planning |
| Inventory and Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) | Moderate–High: physical counts and valuation methods | Inventory counts, systems, cost accountant, operations | Accurate COGS and margins; obsolescence and turnover insights | E‑commerce, retail, manufacturing, product startups | Ensures asset valuation; identifies margin and stock improvements |
| Fixed Assets and Depreciation | Moderate: register verification and capitalization policy | Fixed asset register, physical verification, accountant | Correct asset register; proper depreciation and tax treatment | Manufacturing, asset-intensive businesses, multi-location firms | Ensures accurate balance sheet and depreciation claims |
| Liabilities, Accruals, and Contingencies | High: contingent and legal exposures hard to quantify | Legal counsel, accrual schedules, accountant review | Properly recorded obligations; reserve adequacy; risk disclosure | Companies with litigation, warranties, environmental exposure | Prevents surprise liabilities; improves disclosure accuracy |
| Equity Structure and Capitalization | High: complex cap tables and convertible instruments | Cap table, shareholder agreements, legal/equity specialist | Clear ownership, dilution analysis, equity planning | Startups, venture-backed firms, companies using equity comp | Clarifies ownership and dilution; aids equity administration |
| Compliance, Regulations, and Contractual Obligations | High: large contract volumes and industry rules | Contract repository, legal review, industry specialists | Identified compliance gaps; clarified material obligations | Regulated industries (healthcare, fintech, GDPR‑affected SaaS) | Reduces regulatory risk; ensures contractual obligations tracked |
You get to the last stretch of a deal feeling confident. The headline numbers look fine. Management is polished. The deck is tight. Then your team finally pulls apart the books and finds unreconciled cash, soft accruals, customer credits buried in AR, and a loan covenant nobody mentioned in the first ten calls. That is how bad deals happen. Not with one dramatic fraud. With a pile of small financial lies, lazy accounting, and facts discovered too late.
No company is clean. Good diligence does not prove perfection. It shows you what you are buying, what must be fixed fast, and what should change price, terms, or your willingness to close.
Keep the process tied to financial truth. Revenue quality, working capital, expense classification, debt terms, tax exposure, vendor concentration, reserves, cap table accuracy, contract obligations. These are the things that alter value. Founder charm does not. A pretty market story does not. Neither does a banker-built model that assumes the books are tighter than they are.
Valuation only works if the accounting underneath it is sound. Buyers review historical performance, test quality of earnings, rebuild normalized EBITDA, pressure-test working capital, and examine concentration risk because the purchase price lives or dies on those answers. If the target cannot support those numbers, your model is not analysis. It is fiction with formatting.
That is why outsourced accounting talent matters so much in founder-led deals.
A strong outsourced accountant, CPA, analyst, or accounting manager gives you independent eyes and more speed at the exact moment speed starts to kill judgment. They rebuild schedules, reconcile book-to-tax differences, clean up working capital calculations, test revenue recognition, and call out where management is giving polished explanations instead of evidence. Internal staff often know the history. They also carry bias, fatigue, and loyalty. You need someone paid to find the crack in the floor before you step on it.
I would rather spend money before close than explain regret after close.
Use outside talent aggressively if the target has messy books, a thin finance bench, recent growth, multi-entity operations, or founder-controlled reporting. Those are the deals where financial landmines hide in plain sight. The right outsourced team can surface issues early enough to change structure instead of forcing a last-minute scramble.
Then make the findings matter. Mark every unexplained variance, every weak control, every odd reserve, every customer or vendor concentration issue, every debt clause, and every contract term with financial teeth. Decide what each one changes. Price. Escrow. Indemnity. Earnout. Timing. Or the decision to walk.
Some problems deserve a cleanup plan. Some deserve hard protections in the purchase agreement. Some should kill the deal outright.
That is not pessimism. That is disciplined buying.
If you need finance talent who can help you pressure-test a target before close, HireAccountants is the practical move. You can bring in pre-vetted accountants, CPAs, tax specialists, analysts, and accounting managers fast, so your deal team gets diligence support without dragging out the process or overpaying for shaky help.
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