Top 50 Accounting Interview Questions (Freshers & Experienced) | Learn Edition
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Career Guides · Accounting

Top 50 Accounting Interview Questions
for Freshers & Experienced Professionals

A complete, worldwide-friendly reference — every question paired with a plain-English definition, a real-world example, and the kind of answer that shows an interviewer you actually understand the numbers, not just the vocabulary.

50Questions
04Diagrams
10+Quiz Items
~5000Words
ASSETS LIABILITIES + EQUITY A = L + E
Why this list exists

One profession, three very different interviews

A campus recruiter, a Big Four audit manager, and a CFO hiring a controller are all technically asking about "accounting" — but they are testing three different things: whether you know the vocabulary, whether you can apply it, and whether you can defend a judgment call.

Accounting is often called "the language of business," and like any language, interviews test it at three levels: vocabulary (can you define a term correctly), grammar (can you apply the rule to a transaction), and fluency (can you use the concept to make or defend a business decision). This guide is organized the same way, moving from fundamentals that every fresher must know, through the accounting standards that keep financial statements comparable across the world, into the ratios that investors actually watch, and finally into the tax, audit and judgment-call questions that experienced accountants are expected to handle with confidence.

We have written this for a genuinely global audience. Whether your qualification is a B.Com, a BBA in Accounting, an ACCA, a CPA, a CA, or a CIMA, and whether your local sales tax is called GST, VAT, or sales tax, the underlying accounting logic is identical — only the local label changes. Wherever a term differs by country, we call that out explicitly.

Who this page is for

🎓 Students & freshers preparing for their first accounting, audit, or finance interview.

💼 Experienced accountants brushing up before a senior or managerial-round interview.

📈 Investors who want to read a balance sheet with real confidence.

🏢 Business owners who want to talk to their accountant as an equal, not a stranger.

Section 01 · Freshers

Fundamentals of Accounting

The base layer. Every other answer in this guide leans on these ten ideas, so an interviewer who senses a shaky foundation here will keep digging until they find the crack.

Q.01Basics
Definition

What is accounting?

Accounting is the systematic process of recording, classifying, summarizing, and interpreting financial transactions so that owners, managers, investors, and regulators can make informed decisions. It has three broad branches: financial accounting (reporting to outsiders), cost accounting (tracking the cost of making a product or service), and management accounting (supporting internal decisions such as pricing or budgeting).

Interview tip: Don't just recite the definition — add the "why." Accounting exists because owners and managers are often different people, and the owner needs a reliable way to check on the manager's stewardship of the money.

Q.02Equation
Definition

What is the accounting equation, and why does it always balance?

Assets = Liabilities + Equity. Everything a business owns (assets) was paid for either by borrowing (liabilities) or by the owners' own money and retained profit (equity). Because every transaction is recorded on both sides at once, the two sides can never drift apart — this is the mathematical backbone of double-entry bookkeeping and the reason a balance sheet is called a "balance" sheet.

Real example: A small bakery buys a $6,000 oven with $2,000 cash and a $4,000 supplier loan. Assets rise by $6,000 (the oven), liabilities rise by $4,000 (the loan), and cash — an asset — falls by $2,000. Net effect: assets up $4,000, liabilities up $4,000. Balanced.

Q.03Method
Definition

What is double-entry bookkeeping?

A system where every transaction is recorded in at least two accounts — one debit and one credit of equal value — invented by Italian merchants and formalized by Luca Pacioli in 1494. Because debits always equal credits, the system is self-checking: if the books don't balance, an error exists somewhere.

Q.04Compare
Definition

What is the difference between bookkeeping and accounting?

Bookkeeping is the mechanical, day-to-day recording of transactions — invoices, receipts, payments. Accounting is the broader discipline that takes those records and classifies, summarizes, analyzes, and reports on them to support decisions. In short: bookkeeping feeds accounting the way raw ingredients feed a finished dish.

Q.05Basics
Definition

What are the different types of accounts?

Two frameworks answer this, and mentioning both signals depth. The traditional (British) approach uses Personal, Real, and Nominal accounts. The modern approach, used almost everywhere today, classifies every account as one of five types: Asset, Liability, Equity, Revenue (Income), or Expense. Every ledger account you will ever touch fits into one of these five buckets.

Q.06Process
Definition

What is a journal entry? Can you give an example?

A journal entry is the first, chronological record of a transaction, showing which account is debited and which is credited. It is the "raw" entry before it gets posted (copied) into individual ledger accounts.

Real example: A company buys office supplies worth $500 cash.
Dr. Office Supplies Expense  $500
   Cr. Cash             $500

Q.07Process
Definition

What is a ledger?

A ledger is a collection of all the individual accounts (Cash, Sales, Rent, etc.) where journal entries are posted. If the journal is the diary of transactions in date order, the ledger is the filing cabinet that groups those same transactions by account, so you can see the running balance of "Cash" or "Sales" at a glance. This is sometimes nicknamed the "General Ledger" or GL.

Q.08Control
Definition

What is a trial balance, and what does it prove?

A trial balance is a list of every ledger account and its closing balance, split into debit and credit columns. Its sole job is to prove that total debits equal total credits after posting. It's a checkpoint, not a final report — a trial balance can still "balance" even if a whole transaction was missed or posted to the wrong account, so it is necessary but not sufficient proof of accuracy.

Q.09Compare
Definition

Capital expenditure vs revenue expenditure — what's the difference?

Capital expenditure (CapEx) buys something that will benefit the business for more than one accounting period — a delivery truck, a building, machinery — and is recorded as an asset, then depreciated over its useful life. Revenue expenditure is consumed within the current period — fuel, salaries, rent — and is expensed immediately on the income statement.

Real example: A logistics company buying a new warehouse is CapEx; the electricity bill to run that warehouse next month is revenue expenditure.

Q.10Concept
Definition

What is depreciation, and which methods do you know?

Depreciation is the systematic allocation of a tangible asset's cost over its useful life, reflecting wear, obsolescence, or usage — it is an accounting allocation, not a cash outflow. The two most common methods are the Straight-Line Method (equal expense every year) and the Written-Down Value / Declining Balance Method (a fixed percentage of the reducing book value each year, so more expense is recognized early on).

The freelancer who ignored her books — until tax season

Maria, a freelance graphic designer in Lisbon, spent her first two years invoicing clients through a spreadsheet with no structure — just a list of amounts received. When tax season arrived, she couldn't tell her accountant which expenses were deductible, which invoices were still unpaid, or whether she had actually made a profit. Her accountant rebuilt a year of transactions from bank statements alone, a job that took three weeks and cost more than bookkeeping software would have cost for the entire year.

The lesson she took away — and the one interviewers want to hear articulated — is that double-entry bookkeeping isn't bureaucracy for its own sake. It is the only reliable way to answer two questions any business owner eventually needs answered fast: what do I own, and what do I owe?

Diagram — The Accounting Equation in Motion

ASSETS Cash Equipment Receivables = LIABILITIES Loans Payables Accrued Exp. + EQUITY Capital Retained Earnings Every transaction keeps this equation balanced — always.
What the business owns must always equal what it owes plus what the owners have put in or earned.

Diagram — Anatomy of a T-Account

Cash Account DEBIT (Dr) CREDIT (Cr) Owner Capital   10,000 Sales Revenue  2,500 Rent Paid      1,200 Supplies         500 Total: 12,500 Total: 1,700 Closing Balance = 10,800 (Debit side)
For asset accounts like Cash, debits increase the balance and credits decrease it.
Section 02 · Freshers & Mixed

Principles, Standards & Core Concepts

These questions test whether you understand why accounting rules exist — the assumptions that make financial statements from a company in Tokyo comparable to one in Toronto.

Q.11Standards
Definition

What is GAAP?

Generally Accepted Accounting Principles — the common set of rules, standards, and procedures that companies (especially in the US) must follow when compiling financial statements. GAAP exists to make financial statements consistent, comparable, and trustworthy across companies and time periods.

Q.12Standards
Definition

What is IFRS, and how does it differ from GAAP?

International Financial Reporting Standards, issued by the IFRS Foundation/IASB, are used in over 140 countries including the EU, UK, India (as Ind AS), and most of Asia. The biggest practical difference: GAAP is largely rule-based (detailed, prescriptive rules for specific situations) while IFRS is largely principle-based (broader principles requiring more professional judgment). Inventory valuation is a classic example — GAAP permits LIFO (Last-In-First-Out), while IFRS does not allow it.

Q.13Basis
Definition

Accrual basis vs cash basis of accounting?

Under cash basis, revenue and expenses are recorded only when cash actually changes hands. Under accrual basis, revenue is recorded when earned and expenses when incurred, regardless of when cash moves. Accrual accounting is required under GAAP/IFRS for most companies because it gives a truer picture of financial performance in a given period.

Real example: A consultant finishes a project in December but is paid in January. Under accrual accounting, the revenue belongs to December (when the work was done); under cash accounting, it belongs to January (when the cash arrived).

Q.14Principle
Definition

What is the matching principle?

The matching principle requires that expenses be recorded in the same period as the revenue they helped generate. This is why depreciation spreads an asset's cost across the years it's used, rather than expensing the whole purchase price in year one.

Q.15Principle
Definition

What is the going concern concept?

The assumption that a business will continue operating for the foreseeable future — at least the next 12 months — rather than being liquidated. This assumption is why assets are recorded at cost rather than "fire-sale" liquidation value. Auditors are specifically required to flag doubts about going concern in their report, which is one of the most serious red flags an investor can read.

Q.16Principle
Definition

What is materiality?

Materiality means information is significant enough that its omission or misstatement could influence the economic decisions of someone relying on the financial statements. A $50 error is immaterial for a multinational; the same $50 error could be material for a tiny local shop. It is a matter of both size and context.

Q.17Principle
Definition

What is the conservatism (prudence) concept?

When faced with uncertainty, accountants should choose the option that is least likely to overstate assets or income — "anticipate no profit, but provide for all possible losses." This is why doubtful debts are provided for immediately, but a possible future gain is not recognized until it is realized.

Q.18Principle
Definition

What is the consistency concept?

Once a business chooses an accounting method (say, straight-line depreciation), it should keep using that method period after period. Consistency allows meaningful year-over-year comparison; a company that hops between methods can be, intentionally or not, hiding real trends. A change is allowed only with proper disclosure and justification.

Q.19Concept
Definition

What is a contingent liability?

A potential obligation that depends on the outcome of a future, uncertain event — such as a pending lawsuit. It is not recorded on the balance sheet as an actual liability, but it must be disclosed in the notes if the outcome is reasonably possible, so that readers of the statements aren't blindsided later.

Real example: A manufacturer being sued for a defective product will disclose the lawsuit as a contingent liability until the court rules — at which point it either becomes a real liability or disappears entirely.

Q.20Compare
Definition

Difference between a provision and a reserve?

A provision is money set aside for a known, probable, but not-yet-certain expense or loss (e.g., provision for bad debts) — it reduces profit and is a liability or contra-asset. A reserve is a portion of profit deliberately retained in the business for future use (e.g., general reserve) and sits within equity — it does not represent an obligation to anyone.

Diagram — The Accounting Cycle

1IdentifyTransaction 2Record inJournal 3Post toLedger 4TrialBalance 5Adjusting Entries 6AdjustedTrial Bal. 7FinancialStatements 8ClosingEntries repeats every period
The full loop a business runs every accounting period — monthly, quarterly, or annually.
Section 03 · Freshers, Investors & Business Owners

Financial Statements & Ratio Analysis

This is where accounting becomes genuinely useful to non-accountants. Investors and business owners should be especially comfortable with this section.

Q.21Statements
Definition

What are the three main financial statements?

The Balance Sheet (financial position at one point in time), the Income Statement / Profit & Loss Statement (performance over a period), and the Cash Flow Statement (how cash moved during that period). Together they answer: what do we own and owe, did we make money, and where did the cash actually go?

Q.22Statements
Definition

What is a balance sheet?

A snapshot, as of a specific date, of everything a company owns (assets), owes (liabilities), and the owners' residual stake (equity), always following Assets = Liabilities + Equity. Assets and liabilities are usually split into current (convertible to cash / due within a year) and non-current (long-term).

Q.23Statements
Definition

What is an income statement (P&L)?

A report covering a period of time (a month, quarter, or year) showing Revenue minus Cost of Goods Sold (Gross Profit), minus Operating Expenses (Operating Profit / EBIT), minus interest and tax, to arrive at Net Profit. It answers a single core question: did the business make money during this period, and how?

Q.24Statements
Definition

What is a cash flow statement, and what are its three sections?

A report tracking actual cash movement, split into Operating activities (day-to-day business), Investing activities (buying/selling long-term assets), and Financing activities (loans, share issues, dividends). A profitable company can still run out of cash — this statement is the reason "profit" and "cash" are never the same thing.

Real example: A fast-growing retailer can show strong profit on paper while its cash is tied up in unsold inventory and unpaid customer invoices — a classic case investors watch for.

Q.25Concept
Definition

What is working capital?

Working Capital = Current Assets − Current Liabilities. It measures the short-term operating liquidity available to a business — its ability to cover near-term obligations and fund day-to-day operations without needing new financing.

Q.26Ratio
Definition

What is the current ratio, and how do you calculate it?

Current Ratio = Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities. It measures whether a company can cover its short-term obligations. A ratio around 1.5–2.0 is generally considered healthy, though the "right" number varies heavily by industry.

Real example: Current assets of $300,000 and current liabilities of $150,000 gives a current ratio of 2.0 — the company has $2 of short-term assets for every $1 of short-term debt.

Q.27Ratio
Definition

What is the quick ratio (acid-test ratio)?

Quick Ratio = (Current Assets − Inventory) ÷ Current Liabilities. It's a stricter version of the current ratio because inventory is often the slowest current asset to convert to cash. Investors favor this ratio for businesses (like retail) where unsold stock could sit for months.

Q.28Ratio
Definition

What is the debt-to-equity ratio?

D/E = Total Liabilities ÷ Total Shareholders' Equity. It shows how much of the company is financed by debt versus owners' money. A high ratio signals higher financial risk (and higher potential return); a low ratio signals a more conservatively financed business. "Good" varies a lot by industry — capital-heavy industries like utilities naturally run higher than software companies.

Q.29Metric
Definition

What is EBITDA?

Earnings Before Interest, Tax, Depreciation, and Amortization. It strips out financing decisions (interest), tax jurisdictions, and non-cash accounting charges (depreciation/amortization) to give a rougher measure of core operating performance — commonly used by investors to compare companies with different capital structures or tax situations.

Q.30Ratio
Definition

What is Return on Equity (ROE)?

ROE = Net Income ÷ Shareholders' Equity. It measures how efficiently a company generates profit from the money shareholders have invested. It is one of the single most-quoted metrics by equity investors when comparing companies within the same sector.

The ratio that saved an investor from a bad bet

An early-stage investor was evaluating two competing e-commerce startups with almost identical revenue growth. On paper, both looked like strong buys. But when she pulled the current ratio and debt-to-equity ratio from each company's balance sheet, one company showed a current ratio of 0.7 and a debt-to-equity ratio above 3 — meaning it owed more short-term than it could quickly cover, and was heavily leveraged. The other showed a current ratio near 1.8 with modest debt.

Eighteen months later, the highly leveraged company had to raise emergency funding at a steep discount to existing shareholders, while the more conservatively financed one used its cash cushion to acquire a struggling competitor. The growth numbers told half the story; the balance sheet ratios told the rest.

Diagram — How the Three Statements Connect

Income Statement Net Profit flows into → Balance Sheet Retained Earnings (within Equity) Opening Balance next period Cash Flow Statement Explains the change in the Cash account Profit becomes retained equity. Cash explains what profit alone can't.
No statement stands alone — each one explains a movement that shows up in the others.
Section 04 · Experienced

Taxation, Audit & Compliance

Interviewers move here to check whether you've actually worked with real filings, real audits, and real controls — not just textbook theory.

Q.31Tax
Definition

Direct tax vs indirect tax — what's the difference?

A direct tax is paid straight to the government by the person or entity it is levied on and cannot be shifted to someone else — income tax and corporate tax are examples. An indirect tax is collected by an intermediary (a seller) from the end consumer and then passed on to the government — sales tax, VAT, and GST are examples.

Q.32Tax
Definition

What is GST/VAT?

Goods and Services Tax (GST) and Value Added Tax (VAT) are consumption taxes charged at each stage of the supply chain, with businesses able to reclaim ("input credit") the tax already paid on their purchases, so the tax ultimately falls on the final consumer. Over 170 countries use some form of VAT/GST — the US is a notable exception, relying instead on state-level sales tax.

Q.33Tax
Definition

What is withholding tax (TDS)?

A mechanism where the payer deducts tax at source before paying the recipient, and remits it directly to the tax authority — used worldwide under different names (TDS in India, withholding tax in the US/UK/most countries). It ensures tax collection happens continuously rather than relying entirely on year-end filing.

Q.34Audit
Definition

What is an audit, and what types exist?

An audit is an independent examination of financial records to form an opinion on whether they present a true and fair view. Statutory/external audits are legally required and performed by an independent firm; internal audits are conducted by employees or an outsourced team to review internal processes and controls; tax audits check compliance with tax law; and forensic audits investigate suspected fraud.

Q.35Audit
Definition

What is internal control?

The policies and procedures a company puts in place to safeguard assets, ensure accurate financial reporting, and prevent or detect fraud and error — for example, requiring two signatures on large payments, or separating the person who approves an invoice from the person who pays it (segregation of duties).

Q.36Process
Definition

What is a bank reconciliation statement, and why is it needed?

A comparison between the cash balance in the company's own books and the balance shown on the bank statement, explaining any differences — outstanding checks, deposits in transit, bank charges, or errors. It's needed because the two records rarely update at exactly the same moment, and reconciling regularly is one of the simplest, most effective fraud-detection controls a business has.

Q.37Compare
Definition

Accounts payable vs accounts receivable?

Accounts Payable (AP) is money the business owes to its suppliers — a liability. Accounts Receivable (AR) is money owed to the business by its customers — an asset. Managing the gap between when AR is collected and AP is due is central to cash flow health.

Q.38Concept
Definition

What is an allowance for doubtful accounts (bad debt provision)?

An estimate, made in advance, of receivables that will likely never be collected, recorded as a contra-asset that reduces reported accounts receivable. It follows the conservatism principle — rather than waiting to write off a specific customer's debt, the company anticipates that some percentage of all receivables won't be collected and expenses that estimate upfront.

Q.39Tax
Definition

What is a deferred tax asset/liability?

These arise from timing differences between how income and expenses are recognized for accounting purposes versus tax purposes. A deferred tax liability means you'll owe more tax later than your book income currently suggests (e.g., accelerated tax depreciation); a deferred tax asset means you'll owe less tax later (e.g., a carried-forward tax loss).

Q.40System
Definition

What is a chart of accounts?

A structured, numbered list of every account a company uses to record transactions — its complete filing system, typically grouped by Assets, Liabilities, Equity, Revenue, and Expenses. A well-designed chart of accounts makes reporting, budgeting, and audits dramatically easier; a poorly designed one causes confusion for years.

Why "internal controls" stopped being a boring phrase

In the early 2000s, energy company Enron collapsed after it emerged that executives had used complex off-balance-sheet entities to hide billions of dollars in debt and inflate reported profits, with its auditor, Arthur Andersen, failing to catch or challenge the scheme. The fallout was massive: thousands of jobs lost, retirement savings wiped out, and a major global audit firm shut down entirely.

The direct regulatory result was the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in the US, which made corporate executives personally responsible for the accuracy of financial statements and dramatically strengthened requirements around internal controls and audit independence. It's the reason "internal controls" now comes up in almost every experienced-level accounting interview — it stopped being a theoretical checkbox and became a career-defining topic.

Section 05 · Experienced & Behavioral

Advanced, Managerial & Behavioral Questions

The final stretch — questions that test judgment, tooling familiarity, and how you communicate under pressure, which matters just as much as technical accuracy at senior levels.

Q.41Compare
Definition

Financial accounting vs cost accounting vs management accounting?

Financial accounting reports the company's overall performance to external parties (investors, regulators, banks) following mandatory standards. Cost accounting tracks and analyzes the cost of producing a specific product or service, mainly for internal use. Management accounting is the broadest — using both financial and cost data to support internal planning, budgeting, and strategic decisions, with no mandatory format.

Q.42Concept
Definition

What is variance analysis?

The process of comparing actual results to budgeted or standard figures and investigating the differences ("variances") — for example, a materials cost variance or a labor efficiency variance. It's the tool that turns a budget from a static document into an active management-control system.

Q.43Compare
Definition

Budgeting vs forecasting — what's the difference?

A budget is a fixed financial plan set for a period (typically a year) used as a target and control benchmark. A forecast is a regularly updated estimate of what will actually happen, based on the latest available data — forecasts change throughout the year, while the original budget usually stays fixed as the yardstick for comparison.

Q.44Analysis
Definition

What is break-even analysis?

The point at which total revenue equals total costs — no profit, no loss. Break-Even Point (units) = Fixed Costs ÷ (Selling Price per unit − Variable Cost per unit). It's a core tool for pricing decisions and for business owners deciding whether a new product line is viable.

Real example: A café with $6,000 in monthly fixed costs, selling coffee at $4 with $1.50 variable cost per cup, needs to sell 2,400 cups a month ($6,000 ÷ $2.50) just to break even.

Q.45Compare
Definition

Depreciation vs amortization?

Both spread an asset's cost over its useful life, but depreciation applies to tangible assets (machinery, buildings, vehicles) while amortization applies to intangible assets (patents, trademarks, capitalized software, goodwill in some frameworks). The accounting logic is identical; only the asset type differs.

Q.46Concept
Definition

What is goodwill in accounting?

An intangible asset that arises when a company acquires another business for more than the fair value of its identifiable net assets — representing brand reputation, customer relationships, or synergies the buyer is willing to pay for. Under most current standards, goodwill is not amortized but is instead tested annually for impairment.

Q.47Advanced
Definition

What is consolidation of financial statements?

When a parent company owns a controlling interest (typically over 50%) in one or more subsidiaries, it must combine all their financial statements into a single set, eliminating intercompany transactions and balances (like sales between the parent and subsidiary) so the group is reported as one economic entity, not several separate ones.

Q.48Tools
Definition

Which accounting software or ERP systems have you used?

This question checks practical exposure, not just theory. Common answers, depending on company size, include Tally, QuickBooks, Xero, and Zoho Books for small and mid-sized businesses, and SAP, Oracle NetSuite, and Microsoft Dynamics for larger enterprises. If you haven't used a specific tool, it's better to say so honestly and mention the underlying concepts (chart of accounts, journal posting, reconciliation) transfer easily between systems.

Q.49Behavioral
Definition

Tell me about a time you found a discrepancy in the books. How did you handle it?

Interviewers want a structured answer, ideally in a Situation → Task → Action → Result format: what was the discrepancy, how did you investigate it (tracing it back through the ledger, checking source documents, reconciling with the bank), who did you escalate it to, and what was the outcome. Emphasize a calm, methodical process rather than panic — and always mention communicating clearly with whoever needed to know.

Q.50Behavioral
Definition

Why should we hire you for this role?

The strongest answers connect three things: a specific technical strength relevant to the job description, a concrete example proving that strength (a project, a process improvement, a deadline met under pressure), and a sense of how you'll fit the team's ways of working. Avoid generic claims like "I'm a hard worker" without backing them with a specific, checkable example.

Diagram — Break-Even Point

$ Units Fixed Costs Total Cost Total Revenue Break-Even Point
Where the Total Revenue line crosses the Total Cost line, profit is exactly zero.

Quick Trivia — Test Yourself

10 questions. Pick an answer, then check your score at the bottom.

Interactive
1. What does the accounting equation state?
2. Under accrual accounting, revenue is recorded when...
3. Which financial statement shows performance over a period rather than a single point in time?
4. Which of these is a current asset?
5. The matching principle requires expenses to be recorded...
6. Current Ratio is calculated as:
7. Which depreciation method charges a fixed percentage of the reducing book value each year?
8. A contingent liability is:
9. EBITDA stands for:
10. Which of the following is an example of amortization rather than depreciation?
SCORE: 0 / 10

Answer Key

  1. 1. B — Assets = Liabilities + Equity
  2. 2. C — Recorded when earned
  3. 3. A — Income Statement
  4. 4. D — Accounts receivable
  5. 5. B — Same period as related revenue
  6. 6. A — Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities
  7. 7. C — Written-down value method
  8. 8. D — Disclosed potential obligation
  9. 9. B — Earnings Before Interest, Tax, D&A
  10. 10. A — Patent amortization
Before you go

Frequently Asked Questions

How should a fresher prepare differently from an experienced candidate?
Freshers should focus on nailing definitions and simple journal entries cleanly and confidently — interviewers expect textbook accuracy, not war stories. Experienced candidates should prepare to defend judgment calls (why they chose a method, how they handled a discrepancy) and to speak fluently about the tools and reports they've actually used day to day.
Do these questions apply outside the US and India?
Yes. Every core concept here — the accounting equation, double-entry bookkeeping, accrual accounting, the three financial statements — is universal across GAAP, IFRS, and every national variant. Only a handful of local labels differ, like GST vs VAT vs sales tax, or TDS vs withholding tax, which we've noted explicitly where relevant.
What's the single most common mistake candidates make in accounting interviews?
Reciting a definition word-for-word without being able to apply it to a simple example. Interviewers almost always follow up a definition question with "can you give me an example?" — so practice pairing every concept you know with a concrete transaction or number.
Should investors and business owners really know all 50 of these?
Not necessarily all 50 in depth, but Sections 1 and 3 (Fundamentals, and Financial Statements & Ratios) are genuinely useful for anyone reading a company's accounts, deciding on an investment, or reviewing numbers with their own accountant. The tax and audit sections matter more once you're operating or investing at scale.
What's the difference between an interview for a bookkeeping role and a full accountant role?
Bookkeeping interviews lean heavily on Section 1 (recording transactions accurately, ledgers, trial balances) and software familiarity. Accountant-level interviews add Sections 2 through 5 — standards, financial statement analysis, tax, audit, and judgment-based scenario questions.
Is it okay to say "I don't know" to a technical question?
Yes — far better than guessing confidently and being wrong. A strong response is to be honest, explain how you'd find the answer (which standard you'd check, who you'd ask), and pivot to a related concept you do know well.
How many of these questions should I expect in a single interview?
Most interviews cover 8–15 questions across a 30–45 minute technical round, often mixing two or three from each section along with one or two behavioral questions. Panel or case-study interviews for senior roles may go deeper into fewer topics instead of covering breadth.
Are IFRS and GAAP likely to be tested even for a junior role?
Usually only at a basic, definitional level for freshers — knowing what each stands for and one or two headline differences (like inventory valuation) is normally enough. Deep technical comparisons are typically reserved for more senior or audit-focused roles.
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