Reliable financial reporting starts with strong financial control.

A Virtual Controller sits between your bookkeeper and your CFO. The focus is financial accuracy, reporting discipline, and the oversight that ensures every number leaving your accounting system is reliable. For Canadian businesses that have outgrown basic bookkeeping but are not yet at the stage where a full CFO engagement is the right fit, this is the level of financial support that closes that gap.

Most businesses have accurate books. Not all of them have financial control.

A bookkeeper records transactions. A Virtual Controller owns the layer above it: month-end close, financial statement preparation, internal controls, KPI reporting, and the oversight that turns raw accounting data into numbers you can actually rely on to make decisions.

Without that layer, decisions get made on financials nobody has validated, CRA filings are based on numbers assembled in a rush, and the business has no clear picture of its actual financial position month to month.

A Wefinx Virtual Controller engagement builds that foundation remotely, integrated with your existing bookkeeping environment, on a structured monthly engagement with no long-term contract.

What a Virtual Controller Engagement Includes

These are the areas a Wefinx Virtual Controller works on inside your business every month.

Month-End Close and Financial Statement Preparation

A structured month-end close process that produces accurate financial statements within a defined timeline every month. Balance sheet reconciliations, accruals, prepayments, and adjusting journal entries are managed as part of the monthly process. Statements are prepared to a standard that supports lender reporting, CRA compliance, and informed decision-making.

What changes:

You have accurate, timely financial statements every month. The numbers you make decisions on are reliable.

KPI Reporting and Management Reporting

Monthly financial statements tell you what happened. KPI and management reporting show how the business is actually performing month to month. Gross margin, overhead ratio, receivables aging, payables cycle, and budget versus actual variance all sit within the controller’s reporting scope. Reporting is structured around the metrics that actually drive your business, not generic templates.

What changes:

You have a clear monthly view of performance alongside compliance. Management decisions are grounded in metrics that are relevant to your business.

Accounts Receivable and Accounts Payable Monitoring

Receivables and payables sit at the intersection of financial accuracy and cash flow. The controller monitors aging, flags collection issues, manages payables timing, and ensures the working capital position is reflected accurately in the financials. For businesses with multiple customers, vendors, or payment terms, this oversight prevents the quiet accumulation of cash flow pressure.

What changes:

Receivables are monitored and followed up systematically. Payables are managed with cash position in mind. Working capital does not deteriorate silently.

Budgeting Support and Budget vs Actual Variance Reporting

An annual budget is only useful if it is tracked against actual results and reviewed regularly. The controller builds the budget framework, loads it into your reporting environment, and produces monthly budget versus actual variance analysis so gaps are visible and explainable before they compound.

What changes:

You know where you are tracking against plan every month and why. Surprises are surfaced early, not discovered at year-end.

13-Week Cash Flow Projections

Rolling 13-week cash flow reporting gives visibility into the cash position, upcoming obligations, and potential gaps before they become operational problems. Built from actual receivables, payables, payroll schedules, and known commitments, updated monthly.

What changes:

You know your cash position weeks ahead. Gaps are visible in time to act on them.

Internal Controls and Process Oversight

Internal controls are the policies and processes that protect financial accuracy and reduce the risk of error or misstatement. Segregation of duties, approval workflows, expense documentation standards, and account reconciliation schedules all sit within the controller’s scope. For businesses that have grown past informal early-stage systems, this is where financial discipline is established.

What changes:

Financial processes are structured and consistent. Errors are caught before they compound and the business is audit-ready at any point.

CRA Compliance and Year-End Package

HST/GST remittances, payroll source deductions, and CRA filing deadlines are tracked and managed. A clean, complete year-end package is prepared for your tax advisor: working papers, reconciliations, adjusting entries, and supporting documentation organized and ready. The time and cost of year-end are reduced because the work has been done throughout the year.

What changes:

CRA obligations are managed proactively. Year-end is not a crisis. Your tax advisor receives organized, accurate working papers.

Financial maturity matters. Where does your business stand?

Many businesses have financial statements but lack clarity on whether their financial systems can support growth, financing, and complex decisions. The Financial Maturity Assessment evaluates reporting, cash flow, forecasting, controls, profitability, and financial leadership to identify strengths and areas where reporting and financial processes need improvement.

Built for Canadian Businesses That Need More Than a Bookkeeper

Past the stage where informal bookkeeping is sufficient. Operating with increasing financial complexity that requires oversight, controlled reporting, and someone reviewing the numbers before decisions are made on them.

Revenue is growing, transactions are more complex, and the bookkeeper is producing data but nobody is validating it. A Virtual Controller steps into that gap without the cost of a full-time hire.

A bank is requesting reviewed financials. CRA has sent a query. An investor wants organized documentation. In each case, the business needs accurate, well-organized records produced by a controlled process. A Virtual Controller builds and maintains that standard as the baseline, not a one-time exercise.

CFO-level work depends on having accurate financials as its foundation. Businesses preparing to move into a Virtual CFO or Fractional CFO engagement use the controller layer to ensure the financial infrastructure is in place before the strategic work begins.

The controller builds the foundation. The CFO builds on top of it.

A Virtual Controller manages financial accuracy, reporting, and oversight, while a Virtual CFO focuses on strategy, forecasting, and long-term planning. Businesses often begin with controller support and expand into Virtual CFO services as complexity grows, with engagement scope adjusted to match operational and financial needs.

What Our Clients Are Saying

Real feedback from real business owners. We let the work speak.

Services That Work Alongside This

The controller sits above your bookkeeping layer. If bookkeeping is handled by Wefinx, the integration is seamless with full visibility across the financial picture. If it is handled internally, the controller reviews and builds on that output.

Corporate tax planning, CRA compliance, and owner compensation strategy coordinated alongside the controller engagement so your financial and tax decisions stay aligned and nothing is optimized in isolation.

When the business is ready to move from financial oversight into forward-looking strategy, forecasting, and capital planning, the controller engagement scales into a Virtual CFO engagement. No handoffs. Same team.

Reliable numbers are not optional. They are the starting point for everything.

Every Wefinx Virtual Controller engagement starts with a structured onboarding phase. We review your existing bookkeeping, identify gaps, establish your month-end close process, and set up your reporting framework before the regular work begins.

A 30-minute discovery call is all it takes.

Questions About Virtual Controller Services

What is the difference between a bookkeeper and a Virtual Controller?

A bookkeeper records and categorizes transactions. A Virtual Controller owns the financial process above that layer: month-end close, financial statement preparation, balance sheet reconciliations, internal controls, and reporting accuracy. The controller reviews and validates what the bookkeeper produces, prepares management reporting, and ensures the numbers are reliable before anyone makes decisions based on them. Both roles are necessary. They are not interchangeable.

What is the difference between a Virtual Controller and a Virtual CFO?

A Virtual Controller focuses on financial accuracy, reporting integrity, and operational oversight. The output is reliable financials and a controlled process. A Virtual CFO uses that output to drive strategy, forecasting, capital planning, and business decisions. The controller builds the foundation the CFO works from. Many businesses need the controller layer in place before a CFO engagement delivers its full value.

When does a Canadian business need a Virtual Controller?

Common signals: month-end close is inconsistent or takes too long, the bookkeeper is producing data but nobody is reviewing it, CRA filings are based on numbers that have not been reconciled, a lender has asked for financial statements the business cannot produce confidently, or the business is growing and informal financial systems are no longer adequate. The trigger is usually not a revenue threshold. It is when the cost of unreliable numbers starts showing up in decisions.

How does a Virtual Controller work with my existing bookkeeper?

The controller sits above the bookkeeping layer, reviews and validates the output each month, and establishes process standards the bookkeeper works within. If bookkeeping is handled by Wefinx, the integration is seamless. If it is handled internally or by another provider, the controller reviews that work and builds the reporting layer above it. The controller is not replacing your bookkeeper. They are providing the oversight that makes the bookkeeper’s work reliable.

How much does a Virtual Controller engagement cost?

Wefinx Virtual Controller engagements start at $3,800 per month on a fixed monthly basis so costs are predictable. Pricing scales with transaction volume, number of entities, and scope of reporting required. Full pricing is on the Pricing page. A discovery call is the best starting point for a number specific to your business.

Can a Virtual Controller help us prepare for a CRA review or lender request?

Yes. Accurate, reconciled, well-documented financials are the best preparation for either. A Virtual Controller builds and maintains that standard as the baseline throughout the engagement. Businesses that have navigated a CRA query or a lender request without organized records understand the cost of not having this in place. The goal is for that standard to exist continuously, not to be assembled reactively when a review is announced.