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As the end of your financial year approaches, attention naturally turns to what needs to be done before the deadline.

While much of the focus is often on compliance, year-end also provides an opportunity to take practical action. The decisions made in these final weeks can influence both your current tax position and how you start the next financial year.

This checklist brings together the key areas worth reviewing while there is still time to act.

For business owners and directors, year-end is often viewed through a commercial lens.

Performance is assessed, profits are measured, and attention turns to tax liabilities within the business. What can be overlooked, at least initially, is how those outcomes translate into personal financial position, both now and over the longer term.

For larger and mid-market businesses, the year-end is often defined by process. Timetables are set, audit files are prepared, and internal teams work towards delivering a compliant set of financial statements.

As the financial year draws to a close, many owner-managed businesses turn their attention to a familiar set of questions centred around how much profit has been generated, what the tax exposure will be, and how best to extract value from the business.

For early-stage and scaling businesses, the year-end often arrives in the middle of momentum. Revenue is growing, teams are expanding, and attention is focused on product, funding, and market position. Tax and structure tend to follow behind.

That is understandable but it is also where we see some of the most valuable planning opportunities missed.

As the financial year draws to a close, attention naturally turns to year-end.

For many businesses, this means finalising numbers, reviewing tax exposure, and ensuring everything is in place ahead of reporting deadlines. These are necessary steps, but on their own they risk reducing year-end to a process rather than recognising it as a point of perspective.

Companies House has recently sent an e-mail to all registered e-mail addresses that they hold on their records regarding an issue with its WebFiling service. While the issue has now been resolved and was not the result of a cyber-attack, it is important that businesses are aware of what happened and take a moment to review their company records as a precaution.

The Chancellor announced her 2025 Autumn Budget Statement on Wednesday 26th November. Ward Williams Chartered Accountants shares the highlights of the announcement.