A financial statement audit is often treated as an annual administrative task until the deadline for filing financial statements or holding an AGM gets close. At that point, missing schedules, unreconciled balances, and delayed replies can create unnecessary pressure for directors and finance teams. This financial statement audit guide explains what an audit involves, how to prepare properly, and how to keep the process timely and manageable.
For Singapore businesses, an audit is not simply a review of whether the numbers add up. It is an independent examination of the financial statements, supporting records, and key controls. The auditor’s role is to obtain sufficient evidence to form an opinion on whether the financial statements are fairly presented in accordance with the applicable financial reporting framework.
When does a business need a financial statement audit?
Many private companies in Singapore may qualify for audit exemption if they meet the small company criteria. Broadly, a company is considered small when it meets at least two of three thresholds for the immediate past two financial years: total annual revenue of S$10 million or below, total assets of S$10 million or below, and 50 employees or fewer.
However, audit exemption is not automatic in every situation. A company within a group may need to consider group-level requirements. Its constitution, shareholders, lenders, investors, grant providers, or contractual obligations may also require audited financial statements. Charities, Institutions of a Public Character, MCSTs, and other entities can have separate reporting and governance obligations.
Even where an audit is not legally required, some organizations choose one because it gives directors, owners, and external stakeholders greater confidence in the financial information. The right approach depends on the entity’s size, structure, funding, and reporting needs.
What a financial statement audit covers
An external audit does not mean checking every transaction in the ledger. Auditors use professional judgment, risk assessment, and sampling to focus work on areas that could materially affect the financial statements.
The engagement commonly includes a review of revenue, expenses, bank balances, receivables, payables, inventory where applicable, fixed assets, loans, payroll, tax balances, related-party transactions, and equity. The auditor also considers whether the entity can continue operating as a going concern and whether its financial statement disclosures are complete and appropriate.
For an SME, the scope will usually reflect the business model. A trading company may need greater attention on inventory and sales cut-off. A service business may require detailed support for revenue recognition and unbilled income. A holding company may need clear records for investments, intercompany balances, and group reporting. The audit should be tailored to the risks in the business rather than treated as a one-size-fits-all exercise.
The audit process, from planning to signed statements
A well-managed audit usually starts before the fieldwork date. The auditor first obtains an understanding of the business, its operations, accounting processes, and changes during the financial year. This planning stage helps identify higher-risk areas and determine the documents needed.
Next, the client prepares the draft financial statements, trial balance, lead schedules, and supporting documents. The auditor then performs testing and sends questions or requests for clarification. These requests are normal. They may relate to a particular invoice, bank transfer, contract, board resolution, or reconciliation.
Once testing is substantially complete, the auditor discusses proposed adjustments, disclosure matters, and any control observations with management. Management is responsible for preparing the financial statements and making necessary corrections. The auditor then finalizes the audit opinion, subject to receiving complete information and signed representations from directors or management.
Timing depends on the quality and readiness of the records. A straightforward audit with organized schedules can move efficiently. An audit involving late accounts, unresolved differences, significant related-party transactions, or incomplete documentation will take longer. Starting early is usually less costly and less disruptive than trying to resolve every issue immediately before an AGM deadline.
How to prepare for an audit efficiently
The most useful preparation is not gathering documents only after the auditor asks. Finance teams should close the books properly, reconcile key balances, and assemble evidence in a logical format before fieldwork begins.
Start with a finalized trial balance that agrees to the draft financial statements. Bank accounts should be reconciled to year-end statements, with explanations for old reconciling items. Customer and supplier balances should be supported by aging reports and subsequent receipts or payments where relevant. Loan, lease, and fixed-asset schedules should agree to the ledger and be supported by agreements, invoices, and calculations.
Revenue records deserve close attention. Keep contracts, sales reports, invoices, credit notes, and evidence of services performed or goods delivered. For businesses with substantial cash, retail sales, or GTO reporting requirements, the audit trail between point-of-sale reports, bank deposits, accounting records, and contractual terms should be clear.
Directors should also ensure that minutes, resolutions, shareholder records, and related-party information are available. Transactions with directors, companies under common control, or family members may be entirely legitimate, but they must be accurately recorded and properly disclosed where required.
A practical audit file normally includes:
- Draft financial statements, trial balance, general ledger, and detailed lead schedules
- Bank statements, reconciliations, loan documents, and financing correspondence
- Major customer and supplier listings, invoices, contracts, and payment support
- Payroll records, tax computations, CPF-related documentation, and expense support
- Board minutes, signed agreements, corporate records, and related-party details
Providing complete information at the start reduces repeated follow-up questions. It also allows the audit team to focus on resolving genuine accounting issues instead of locating basic records.
Common causes of audit delays
The most frequent delay is a late or incomplete year-end close. If the trial balance changes repeatedly during the audit, schedules and financial statements must be updated, and testing may need to be repeated. This is particularly common when reconciliations are left until the end of the year.
Another issue is insufficient supporting documentation. A payment entry alone may not explain the business purpose of a transaction. Auditors may need the invoice, approval, contract, delivery evidence, or correspondence to establish what occurred and whether the accounting treatment is appropriate.
Unrecorded liabilities, unsupported revenue cut-off, old receivables, and unexplained intercompany balances also require time to resolve. These are not merely audit matters. They can affect management’s understanding of cash flow, profitability, and the financial position of the business.
Communication matters as well. Appoint one internal coordinator who can collect records, track requests, and escalate issues to decision-makers promptly. An auditor cannot finalize an engagement while important questions remain unanswered, even if the reporting deadline is close.
Working effectively with your external auditor
A productive audit relationship is based on clear responsibilities. Management prepares the accounts, maintains the records, and makes judgments about the business. The auditor remains independent and evaluates whether sufficient evidence supports the financial statements. An auditor can explain findings and request information, but cannot take over management’s role.
Be open about changes during the year. New financing, major contracts, acquisitions, restructuring, losses, legal disputes, changes in directors, or cash-flow concerns should be raised early. Early disclosure gives both sides time to assess the accounting and reporting impact.
Cost is also affected by preparation. An affordable audit does not mean reducing the work needed for a proper opinion. It means setting a clear scope, keeping records organized, responding promptly, and avoiding preventable rework. For SMEs and nonprofit entities with lean finance functions, an auditor that communicates clearly and works to an agreed timetable can make a significant difference.
Questions directors should ask before the audit begins
Directors should know the expected timetable, the information required, the key reporting risks, and who is responsible for each action. They should also ask whether there are changes in accounting standards, disclosure requirements, or statutory obligations that may affect the current year.
For group companies, confirm whether component reporting instructions, consolidation schedules, and intercompany confirmations will be needed. For charities, MCSTs, and entities handling restricted funds or maintenance funds, make sure the audit team understands the entity-specific reporting requirements from the outset.
The best time to prepare for an audit is before year-end, not after the deadline is already fixed. Keep reconciliations current, retain supporting records, and address unusual transactions when they happen. With organized accounts and a responsive audit partner, the annual audit becomes a controlled compliance process rather than a last-minute disruption.