About Financial Controller interviews
Financial Controller interviews are weighted heavily toward technical credibility and ownership of the close. Expect a recruiter screen confirming qualification status (ACA/ACCA/CIMA), industry sector, team size managed, and systems exposure (NetSuite, SAP, Oracle, Xero depending on company stage). The hiring manager — usually the FD or CFO — then probes how you run a month-end close, your grip on controls, statutory reporting, audit, and tax compliance. Many processes include a technical assessment: a reconciliation exercise, a flawed set of accounts to critique, a consolidation question, or a deferred revenue/accruals scenario. Larger or PE-backed businesses add a case study on improving close timelines or building a control environment. A final stage typically tests stakeholder management with non-finance executives and cultural fit with the leadership team. Candidates most often stumble in three places: speaking abstractly about controls without describing what they personally implemented; being vague on technical accounting (revenue recognition under IFRS 15, lease accounting, consolidations); and failing to show they can lead and develop a team rather than just do the work themselves. A Controller is judged on whether the numbers can be trusted and whether the function runs without the FD firefighting — so interviewers screen relentlessly for accuracy, discipline, and the ability to harden processes while still partnering commercially with the business.
Typical stages
- Recruiter screen
- Hiring manager (FD/CFO) interview
- Technical assessment / case study
- Stakeholder and panel interview
- Final / values and offer
Common formats
- Behavioral STAR
- Technical accounting Q&A
- Case study (close improvement or controls)
- Practical reconciliation/consolidation exercise
- Cross-functional stakeholder panel
What hiring managers screen for
- Ownership of an accurate, timely month-end and year-end close
- Strong technical accounting under IFRS/UK GAAP and statutory/tax compliance
- A genuine control mindset — designing and enforcing controls, not just running them
- Ability to lead, develop and retain a finance team
- Commercial business partnering with non-finance stakeholders and the board
Red flags to avoid
- Talks about controls in theory but cannot describe ones they personally built
- Vague or outdated on technical standards (IFRS 15, IFRS 16, consolidations)
- Has only ever done the work, never managed or hardened a process
- Blames audit issues or restatements entirely on others
- No evidence of reducing close times or improving accuracy
Primary questions (15)
Behavioural
Tell me about a time you took ownership of a month-end close that was slow, inaccurate, or unreliable and turned it around.
Why this comes up: Owning a clean, fast close is the core deliverable of a Financial Controller.
Prep pointers
- Quantify the before and after: working days to close, number of post-close adjustments, late journals.
- STAR Situation/Task: state the baseline problem and your specific remit to fix it; Action: name concrete changes (close calendar, cut-off discipline, automated recs, prep-by-owner); Result: give the new timeline and an accuracy or audit metric.
- Avoid describing a generic process — show what you personally changed and why.
- Mention how you sustained the improvement, not just a one-off heroic close.
Behavioural
Describe a situation where you identified a control weakness or a material error before it reached the financial statements.
Why this comes up: Controllers are trusted as the last line of defence on accuracy and controls.
Prep pointers
- Pick an example with real financial stakes and explain how you spotted it.
- STAR Action should cover both the immediate fix and the control you implemented to stop recurrence.
- Show judgement on materiality and on who you escalated to and when.
- Avoid framing it as luck — emphasise the review or reconciliation that surfaced it.
Behavioural
Walk me through a time you led your finance team through a high-pressure period such as year-end audit or a system migration.
Why this comes up: Controllers must deliver under deadline pressure while keeping the team functioning.
Prep pointers
- Choose people leadership, not just task completion, as the centre of the story.
- STAR Action: describe how you allocated work, protected the team from burnout, and kept stakeholders informed.
- Result should include both the delivery outcome and what it did for team capability or morale.
- Avoid sounding like you did everything yourself — that signals you can't delegate.
Behavioural
Give me an example of when you had to challenge a senior leader or the business on a financial position they wanted to take.
Why this comes up: Controllers must hold the line on accuracy and compliance against commercial pressure.
Prep pointers
- Pick a case involving revenue recognition, provisioning, or cost capitalisation where the right answer was contested.
- STAR Action: show how you brought evidence (the standard, the auditor view) rather than just opinion.
- Result should show you preserved the relationship while protecting the numbers.
- Avoid stories where you simply gave in or where you were needlessly combative.
Technical
How do you approach revenue recognition under IFRS 15 for a contract with multiple performance obligations?
Why this comes up: Revenue recognition is the most common source of material misstatement and audit challenge.
Prep pointers
- Be ready to walk the five-step model and apply it to a concrete contract type relevant to the company's sector.
- Explain how you allocate transaction price across obligations and handle variable consideration.
- Mention the controls and documentation you'd put around the revenue judgement.
- Avoid reciting the standard abstractly — anchor it to a SaaS, services, or product example.
Technical
Take me through how you would run a group consolidation, including intercompany eliminations and foreign currency translation.
Why this comes up: Multi-entity consolidation is a frequent Controller responsibility and a common stumbling point.
Prep pointers
- Describe the sequence: trial balance collection, intercompany matching and elimination, FX translation, minority interests.
- Explain how you handle the CTA reserve and which rates apply to which balances.
- Reference the tools or consolidation system you've used and reconciliation checks you rely on.
- Avoid hand-waving over intercompany mismatches — explain how you resolve them at source.
Technical
What controls would you implement around the order-to-cash and procure-to-pay cycles to prevent fraud and error?
Why this comes up: A control mindset across key cycles is central to the Controller's mandate.
Prep pointers
- Cover segregation of duties, authorisation limits, three-way matching, and master data controls.
- Distinguish preventive from detective controls and give examples of each.
- Tie controls to specific risks rather than listing generic best practice.
- Avoid implying controls are static — mention monitoring and periodic review.
Technical
How do you manage corporation tax, VAT, and statutory reporting deadlines alongside the management reporting cycle?
Why this comes up: Controllers own compliance obligations that carry penalties if missed.
Prep pointers
- Describe a compliance calendar and how you coordinate with advisors or in-house tax.
- Explain how you reconcile the tax provision to the statutory accounts.
- Mention how you keep current with regulatory and standards changes.
- Avoid suggesting compliance is purely outsourced — show your review ownership.
Situational
It's day three of close and you discover a reconciliation that's out by a material amount you can't immediately explain. What do you do?
Why this comes up: Tests composure, investigation method, and escalation judgement under deadline pressure.
Prep pointers
- Lay out a logical investigation: isolate the period, check cut-off, trace to source transactions.
- Address the decision on whether to book an estimate, hold the close, or escalate.
- Show you weigh materiality against the deadline rather than panicking.
- Avoid jumping to a journal before you understand the root cause.
Situational
Your auditors propose a significant adjustment you disagree with shortly before sign-off. How do you handle it?
Why this comes up: Audit negotiation and technical defence are routine Controller responsibilities.
Prep pointers
- Describe gathering the technical evidence and the accounting basis for your position.
- Show how you'd escalate to the FD/audit committee and document the conclusion.
- Balance defending the position with knowing when the auditor's view should prevail.
- Avoid framing the auditor as an adversary — emphasise a reasoned, evidenced discussion.
Situational
You inherit a finance team where the close is late every month and the previous Controller left abruptly. What are your first 90 days?
Why this comes up: Many Controller hires are brought in to stabilise a struggling function.
Prep pointers
- Prioritise diagnosis first: understand the close calendar, key risks, and team capability before changing things.
- Sequence quick wins versus structural fixes, and communicate a clear plan to the FD.
- Address building trust with the existing team rather than imposing change abruptly.
- Avoid promising a transformed close in week one — be realistic about stabilisation.
Competency
How do you develop and retain a high-performing finance team, particularly junior accountants studying for qualifications?
Why this comes up: Controllers are people managers and are assessed on building bench strength.
Prep pointers
- Give concrete examples of delegation, study support, and progression you've enabled.
- Show how you balance development time against delivery pressure.
- Mention how you handle underperformance, not just star performers.
- Avoid generic 'I support my team' statements — provide evidence of outcomes like promotions or retention.
Competency
Describe how you've improved finance systems or automation to reduce manual effort and risk.
Why this comes up: Modern Controllers are expected to drive efficiency, not just operate manual processes.
Prep pointers
- Pick a specific project: ERP implementation, automated reconciliations, reporting tooling.
- Quantify time saved or error reduction and your role in scoping and delivery.
- Show you balanced control integrity against automation — speed without losing assurance.
- Avoid claiming credit for a system you only used rather than improved.
Competency
How do you turn the numbers into insight that helps the board or FD make decisions?
Why this comes up: Controllers are increasingly expected to partner commercially, not just report.
Prep pointers
- Give an example where your analysis or commentary changed a decision.
- Show how you make management reporting clear for non-finance readers.
- Demonstrate the link between the close output and forward-looking commercial value.
- Avoid positioning yourself purely as a backward-looking scorekeeper.
Culture fit
How do you balance being the guardian of controls with being seen as a commercial enabler by the rest of the business?
Why this comes up: Controllers must be trusted by finance and respected by the wider business.
Prep pointers
- Show self-awareness about the 'finance says no' stereotype and how you avoid it.
- Give an example of enabling a business outcome while keeping controls intact.
- Demonstrate how you tailor communication to commercial colleagues.
- Avoid implying controls and commercial goals are inherently in conflict.
More practice questions (14)
Technical
How would you account for a finance lease versus an operating lease under IFRS 16?
Why this comes up: Lease accounting is a common technical screen for Controllers.
Technical
Walk me through the journal entries for an accrual and how you'd review accruals at month-end.
Why this comes up: Accruals accuracy is a basic but frequently tested competency.
Technical
How do you reconcile the balance sheet and which accounts do you prioritise for scrutiny?
Why this comes up: Balance sheet integrity is a core Controller responsibility.
Technical
Explain how you would calculate and account for a deferred tax position.
Why this comes up: Deferred tax is a frequent source of error and audit attention.
Technical
What's your approach to managing cash flow forecasting and working capital?
Why this comes up: Many Controllers own cash reporting and liquidity monitoring.
Situational
How would you respond if a key team member resigned the week before year-end audit?
Why this comes up: Tests resilience and resourcing under pressure.
Situational
The CFO asks for the management accounts a week earlier than usual. How do you respond?
Why this comes up: Probes prioritisation and whether you can flex the close without losing accuracy.
Behavioural
Tell me about a time you implemented a new accounting standard or policy across the business.
Why this comes up: Shows technical leadership and change management.
Behavioural
Describe a disagreement you had with another department over numbers and how you resolved it.
Why this comes up: Tests cross-functional influence and stakeholder management.
Competency
How do you keep your technical accounting knowledge current?
Why this comes up: Standards change and Controllers must stay technically credible.
Competency
What KPIs would you use to measure the performance of the finance function itself?
Why this comes up: Shows whether you manage the function as a process with metrics.
Culture fit
What kind of relationship do you expect to have with the FD or CFO?
Why this comes up: Tests fit with the reporting line and expectations of autonomy.
Situational
You suspect a manager is overriding controls to hit a target. What steps do you take?
Why this comes up: Tests integrity and handling of sensitive control breaches.
Technical
How would you structure a month-end close calendar for a multi-entity group?
Why this comes up: Close design is a defining Controller skill.
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