Record Retention Guide
We have compiled a list of the most common tax and financial records that a business or an individual may need to keep and guidelines for how long the records should be retained.
The information contained in this site is of a general nature and may not be applicable to you. Please call our office for specific guidance regarding your situation.
Keep One Year
- Bank reconciliations
- Correspondence with customers or vendors
- Duplicate deposit slips
- Purchase orders (except purchasing department copies)
- Receiving sheets
- Requisitions
- Stenographer’s notebooks
- Stockroom withdrawal forms
Keep Three Years
- General correspondence
- Employee personnel records (after termination)
- Employment applications
- Expired insurance policies
- Internal audit reports
- Internal reports
- Petty cash vouchers
- Physical inventory tags
- Savings bond registration records of employees
Keep Seven Years
- Accident reports and claims
- Accounts payable ledgers and schedules
- Accounts receivable ledgers and schedules
- Cancelled checks
- Expired contracts and leases
- Expense analysis and expense distribution schedules
- Inventories of products, materials and supplies
- Invoices to customers
- Notes receivable ledgers and schedules
- Expired option records
- Sales records
- Subsidiary ledgers
- Time books
- Voucher for payments to vendors, employees, etc.
Keep Permanently
- Audit reports of accountants
- Cash books, charts of accounts
- Cancelled checks for important payments
- Contracts and leases still in effect
- Correspondence on legal and other important matters
- Deeds
- Mortgage and bills of sale
- Depreciation schedules
- Financial statements (end-of-year)
- General ledgers (and end-of-year trial balances)
- Insurance records, current accident reports, claims, policies
- Journals
- Minute books of directors and stockholders
- Property appraisals by outside appraisers
- Property records
- Tax returns and worksheets, revenue agents’ reports and other documents relating to determination of income tax liability
Keep One Year
- While it’s important to keep year-end mutual fund and IRA contribution statements forever, you don’t have to save monthly and quarterly statements once the year-end statement has arrived.
Keep Three Years
- Credit Card Statements
- Medical Bills (in case of insurance disputes)
- Utility Records
- Expired Insurance Policies
Keep Six Years
- Supporting Documents For Tax Returns
- Accident Reports and Claims
- Medical Bills (if tax-related)
- Property Records / Improvement Receipts
- Sales Receipts
- Other Tax-Related Bills
Keep Permanently
- CPA Audit Reports
- Legal Records
- Important Correspondence
- Income Tax Returns
- Income Tax Payment Checks
- Investment Trade Confirmations
- Retirement and Pension Records
Special Circumstances
- Car Records (keep until the car is sold)
- Credit Card Receipts (keep until verified on your statement)
- Insurance Policies (keep for the life of the policy)
- Mortgages / Deeds / Leases (keep 6 years beyond the agreement)
- Pay Stubs (keep until reconciled with your W-2)
- Property Records / improvement receipts (keep until property sold)
- Sales Receipts (keep for life of the warranty)
- Stock and Bond Records (keep for 6 years beyond selling)
- Warranties and Instructions (keep for the life of the product)
- Other Bills (keep until payment is verified on the next bill)
- Depreciation Schedules and Other Capital Asset Records (keep for 3 years after the tax life of the asset)