Many private companies consider reviewed or audited financial statements only after a bank requests them.
This is understandable. Owners focus on running operations, serving customers, managing teams, and pursuing growth. Financial statement readiness rarely feels urgent until an external stakeholder demands it.
However, waiting until the bank asks creates avoidable pressure.
Compressed Timelines Create Friction
Once the bank requests reviewed or audited financial statements, companies must act quickly.
Owners must engage a CPA, understand the engagement type, gather documentation, reconcile accounts, prepare schedules, and respond to inquiries.
Bankers await information to support underwriting or credit reviews.
CPAs must plan and execute engagements within timelines that could have been smoother with earlier preparation.
This creates stress for all parties involved.
Financial Records May Not Be Ready
One of the biggest challenges is that company records may not be prepared for the required level of review.
Common issues include:
- Incomplete reconciliations
- Unclear documentation
- Inconsistent reporting
- Missing support
- Weak closing procedures
- Limited internal review
- Outdated accounting policies
- Unclear ownership of financial schedules
These issues can be addressed, but they are easier to resolve before deadlines become urgent.
Earlier Preparation Provides More Options
Companies that prepare in advance maintain greater control.
They can understand bank requirements, assess record readiness, identify gaps, and plan appropriate engagement timelines.
They can also determine whether reviewed financial statements may be appropriate before pursuing audited statements.
This planning helps companies avoid unnecessary disruption when lending needs arise.
Questions Owners Should Ask Earlier
Private-company owners should consider asking:
- Could our bank require reviewed or audited financial statements?
- Are our current records ready for that process?
- Do we have proper documentation?
- Are reconciliations current and complete?
- Are revenue and expense policies clearly supported?
- Do we understand the timeline?
- Should we consult with a CPA before a lender request becomes urgent?
These questions are easier to answer before the bank is waiting.
Why Bankers Benefit from Earlier Readiness
Earlier preparation also benefits business bankers.
When clients understand requirements and begin preparing in advance, bankers receive better information, experience fewer delays, and obtain more reliable support for underwriting or credit reviews.
This improves the overall client experience and strengthens the banker’s role as a proactive advisor.
Financial Statement Readiness Supports More Than Lending
The same preparation that supports lending also supports other business events.
Companies with stronger financial statements are better prepared for refinancing, investor discussions, buyer diligence, succession planning, or management decision-making.
This makes financial statement readiness a broader business discipline.
Final Thought
The worst time to prepare for financial statement scrutiny is after the request becomes urgent.
Private companies should treat financial statement readiness as part of their broader financing discipline.
Preparation creates options. Reaction creates pressure.
Companies that prepare before the bank asks are better positioned to respond with confidence when financial information becomes important.
Suggested CTA
If your company may need reviewed or audited financial statements for lending or refinancing, Reliant CPA PC can help assess readiness before the bank request becomes urgent.


