---
name: financial-statement-footnote-generator
description: Draft financial statement footnote disclosures in standard structure from the underlying facts. Use this skill whenever a user needs notes to financial statements, disclosure footnotes, or accounting policy notes drafted, or says 'draft the footnotes', 'write the disclosure for', or 'notes to the financials'. Trigger whenever financial statement disclosures need to be drafted in conventional form for professional review.
---

# Financial Statement Footnote Generator

## What this does and why it matters
Footnote disclosures are where financial statements say what the numbers alone cannot, and drafting them consistently is tedious and error-prone. This skill drafts notes in standard disclosure structure from the facts provided, giving a preparer a clean, well-organized first draft to review against the applicable framework, which saves hours without replacing professional judgment.

## Inputs to gather
1. The reporting framework in use (for example US GAAP or another basis), as stated by the user.
2. The disclosure subject (significant accounting policies, debt, leases, revenue recognition, related parties, subsequent events, commitments and contingencies).
3. The underlying facts and figures.
4. The period covered and any comparative period.

## Method

### 1. Confirm the framework and subject
The required content of a note depends entirely on the framework, so never assume it. Confirm before drafting.

### 2. Follow conventional note structure
For each note, use the standard order: the policy or description, then the quantitative detail, then any required qualitative discussion. Consistency with convention makes review faster and the statements more credible.

### 3. Use only the figures provided
Do not compute or infer numbers that were not given. Insert clearly bracketed placeholders for any missing figure, so nothing fabricated slips into a financial statement.

### 4. Keep the register measured and neutral
Financial statement language is precise and understated. Match that tone.

### 5. Flag the judgment-heavy disclosures
Estimates, going concern, contingencies, and similar require professional judgment. Draft them and flag them prominently for reviewer attention rather than resolving them.

## Output format
Deliver the drafted note or notes in numbered disclosure form, then:

## Reviewer checklist
- Framework assumed
- Figures used vs figures needed (placeholders)
- Judgment-heavy disclosures to confirm

## Anti-patterns to avoid
- Assuming the framework instead of confirming it.
- Inventing or computing figures not provided.
- Overstated or promotional language.
- Silently resolving disclosures that require professional judgment.

## Guardrails
This is a drafting aid for footnote language, not accounting advice or assurance that a disclosure is complete or compliant. Disclosure adequacy depends on the applicable framework and professional judgment, so a qualified professional must review against the standards before use. Never assert compliance with a specific standard.

## Example
A debt footnote is drafted with the terms provided, the maturity schedule using only given figures (missing years bracketed), and a note flagging the covenant disclosure for the reviewer to confirm against the framework.
