Accounting Cleanup & Reconstruction Services

Fixing Broken Books and Restoring Financial Clarity

Few things create more stress for business owners than realizing their financial records are unreliable.

Unfortunately, accounting issues are extremely common. Businesses may rely on inexperienced accountants, operate without clear financial processes, or grow faster than their accounting systems can handle.

When this happens, financial statements become inaccurate, accounts fall out of balance, and leadership loses confidence in the numbers.

CFO Solutions specializes in accounting cleanup and financial reconstruction.

We step into difficult financial situations and restore order to the books.

What Accounting Problems Usually Look Like

Many companies come to us with issues such as:

  • Bank and credit card accounts that haven’t been reconciled in months
  • Accounts receivable or accounts payable balances that don’t match reality
  • Missing or incomplete financial records
  • Inconsistent or unreliable financial statements
  • Job costs or project costs that cannot be trusted
  • Large unexplained balances in balance sheet accounts

These problems can prevent businesses from securing financing, filing accurate taxes, or understanding their true financial position.

Our Approach to Accounting Disaster Relief

Our process begins with a full financial diagnostic. We analyze the company’s accounting records, identify discrepancies, and determine the scope of reconstruction required.

From there we work to:

  1. Reconcile accounts and repair financial statements
  2. Rebuild historical financial records where necessary
  3. Resolve discrepancies between accounting records and operational reality
  4. Implement processes that prevent the issues from recurring

Once cleanup is complete, we help implement structured monthly close procedures that ensure financial records remain accurate going forward.

The Result

After reconstruction, clients gain:

  • Reliable financial statements
  • Organized accounting systems
  • Clear visibility into financial performance
  • Confidence presenting financials to lenders, investors, and stakeholders

Most importantly, leadership regains trust in the numbers that guide business decisions.