Please note: Information is current as of the publication date and presented in brief. The bookkeeping regulations are detailed and vary by industry — consult a CPA to check the obligations applying to your business.

Category: Tax Authorities | Reading time: approx. 7 minutes

A bookkeeping audit is a surprise inspection conducted by Israel Tax Authority inspectors at the business premises, with one purpose: to check whether the business keeps its books as required — and above all, whether every receipt is recorded lawfully, in real time. Unlike an assessment audit conducted at the assessing office based on filed returns, a bookkeeping audit happens at your place of business, unannounced, sometimes minutes after a customer paid at the register. The consequences of failing such an audit are far more severe than most business owners imagine.

The Legal Basis: The Bookkeeping Regulations

Every taxpayer operating a business in Israel must keep books under the Income Tax (Bookkeeping) Regulations, 1973. The regulations are not uniform: they are built from industry-specific schedules — for manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers, professionals, physicians, brokers, garages, restaurants and more — and each schedule prescribes which books must be kept and how. Among the common books and records:

  • A cash-register tape or computerized point-of-sale system;
  • Receipt vouchers and tax invoices, consecutively numbered;
  • A receipts-and-payments book or accounting system;
  • An orders book, a goods-received book and inventory records — in the relevant industries;
  • External documentation — supplier invoices, delivery notes and receipts.

The most important rule, around which most audits revolve: every receipt must be recorded immediately upon its receipt — cash, cheque, credit card, Bit or bank transfer. Not at the end of the day, not "after the customer leaves" — immediately.

What Does the Audit Look Like in Practice?

Audits are conducted without warning, and sometimes use a "test purchase": an inspector arrives as an ordinary customer, makes a purchase and pays — and only then identifies himself and checks whether the receipt was recorded. In the audit itself, inspectors typically check:

  • Whether the latest receipts — including the test purchase — were recorded in the register or receipt vouchers;
  • A cash count compared against the records (a "till count");
  • The existence and ongoing maintenance of the books required under your industry schedule;
  • Matching between delivery notes and invoices, order records, and documentation of employees present.

The findings are recorded in a report signed on the spot. Important to know: you have the right to read the report before signing, to add comments and to state your version — and those comments can prove critical later.

The Unrecorded Receipt: The Classic Trigger — Section 145B

Section 145B(a)(1) of the Income Tax Ordinance sets a strict rule: a taxpayer who failed to record a receipt he was required to record — his books are deemed unacceptable (disqualified) for that tax year, unless the assessing officer is persuaded there was a "sufficient cause" for the failure. In other words: one unrecorded receipt, even of a few dozen shekels, is enough to put the business at risk of disqualification — and the burden of persuasion is on you.

A particularly painful point: even if the person who failed to record the receipt is an employee — the responsibility is the owner's. The claim "the new employee didn't know" is almost never accepted as sufficient cause. On the other hand, circumstances such as a documented technical malfunction, exceptional workload recorded in real time, or recording in an alternative document — are examined on their merits, and in appropriate cases have been accepted.

What Happens When Books Are Disqualified? The Consequences

Book disqualification — whether for an unrecorded receipt or for a material deviation from the bookkeeping regulations — is one of the most significant sanctions in Israeli tax law:

  • Best-judgment assessment — the assessing officer may disregard your filed returns and determine income based on estimates, industry economic guidelines and comparisons — almost always to your detriment;
  • Reversal of the burden of proof — in objection and appeal proceedings, the duty to prove the assessment is excessive shifts to you, without acceptable books to lean on;
  • Denial of benefits and offsets — the Ordinance restricts loss offsets and various deductions for those whose books were found unacceptable;
  • Fines — in both income tax and VAT, and exposure to denial of input VAT deductions;
  • Damaged standing with the authorities — a business whose books were disqualified is flagged, and can expect frequent audits and stricter treatment in the years ahead;
  • And in severe or repeated cases — exposure to criminal proceedings.

Received a Notice of Intent to Disqualify Your Books? There Is Something to Do

It is important to understand the order of the process: disqualification is not immediate. First, the business owner receives a notice of intent to disqualify the books — and at that stage you have the right to request a hearing before the assessing officer. The hearing is the real opportunity: you present the circumstances, evidence of "sufficient cause" and supporting documentation, and the practical goal is to convert the disqualification into a warning. It is highly advisable that your CPA is the one who attends the hearing — a professional, well-documented presentation of the circumstances quite often changes the outcome, and our experience shows that in appropriate cases the intent to disqualify indeed ends with a warning only. Only if the hearing does not succeed and a disqualification decision is issued do further avenues of recourse remain — including an application to the Books Acceptability Committee or a court appeal, depending on the grounds. The key: act fast, within the statutory deadlines, and with professional accompaniment that knows the process from the inside.

How to Prepare in Advance? A Business Owner's Checklist

  1. Make sure you know which books you must keep — under the industry schedule that applies to you. Many businesses keep less than required without knowing;
  2. Implement an iron rule: every receipt is recorded immediately — no exceptions, under pressure, via Bit, or in small cash;
  3. Train every new employee — and document the training. An untrained cashier is weakness number one;
  4. Perform periodic till reconciliations — cash counts against records, so problems surface with you and not with the inspectors;
  5. Maintain numeric sequence and orderly documentation — invoices, receipts and delivery notes, including in the era of Israel Invoices and allocation numbers;
  6. If an audit arrives — cooperate politely, read the report before signing, state your version in writing, and update your CPA the same day.

Good to know

The minutes after the audit matter almost as much as the audit itself. What is written in the audit report — and the owner's comments recorded in it — form the basis for everything that follows. Do not sign a report you disagree with without noting it, and do not offer improvised explanations under pressure. "I would like to consult my CPA" is an entirely legitimate sentence.

How the Firm Can Help

Our firm accompanies businesses at every stage: compliance checks against the bookkeeping regulations and preventive preparation, immediate accompaniment during an audit, representation in hearings following an unrecorded receipt, and handling objections and appeals against book disqualification and best-judgment assessments. The practice is led by CPA Amir Gonen, the firm's tax partner, together with the firm's partners — former senior officials of the Israel Tax Authority — who know the audit and hearing procedures in depth, a real advantage when you need to establish sufficient cause and convert a disqualification into a warning. Received an audit report or a hearing summons? Don't wait — contact us today.

The above article is provided for general information only and does not constitute professional advice or a substitute for specific consultation. For any question, you are welcome to contact us — we will be happy to advise, accompany and represent you before the tax authorities in Israel.

Sincerely,
Hager-Alperowitz & Co. — Certified Public Accountants

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