The vast 140-year-old conglomerate said that its annual loss for the year to March 2015 would be 37.8 billion yen (USD 318 million), reversing a previously expected 120 billion yen annual profit.
Toshiba left unchanged its previously announced 170 billion yen operating profit on sales of 6.65 trillion yen for its latest fiscal year.
But it said it could not supply forecasts for the current year to March 2016.
Investors appeared to cheer the finalised figures as bringing a sense of closure to the saga, with Toshiba's Tokyo-listed shares jumping 3.17 per cent to 357.6 yen in morning trade even as the broader market turned lower.
One of the most damaging accounting scandals to hit Japan in recent years, the case prompted an incumbent president and seven other top executives to resign after the company-hired panel found top management complicit in a years-long scheme to pad profits.
The embarrassing findings came just months after Japan adopted a long-awaited corporate governance code aimed at improving firms' transparency
Best known for its televisions and electronics, including the world's first laptop personal computer and DVD player, Toshiba has more than 200,000 employees globally and also operates in power transmission and medical equipment.
Toshiba is to hold a shareholders meeting at the end of this month.
Last month, Toshiba was booted from a stock index launched to highlight firms with the best return on equity and other shareholder friendly criteria.
Toshiba's business was dented by the financial crisis, while the 2011 Fukushima disaster squashed demand for atomic power at home in a big blow to the firm's key nuclear division.
Top executives complained of "shameful results" that could not be made public.
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