Accounting Policies for SMEs: How to Set Them Up to Reduce Audit Friction
For many SMEs in Singapore, accounting policies sound like something meant only for large corporations. In practice, they are one of the most effective tools SMEs can use to reduce audit queries, avoid repeated adjustments, and speed up year-end closing.
Most audit friction does not come from complicated standards—it comes from unclear, inconsistent, or undocumented accounting policies. When policies are missing or vague, auditors must ask more questions, challenge judgments, and perform extra work.
This article explains—in plain English—what accounting policies really are, why auditors care so much about them, and how SMEs can set up simple, practical policies that make audits smoother year after year.
What Are Accounting Policies (In Simple Terms)?
Accounting policies are the rules your company follows when recording transactions.
They answer questions such as:
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When do we recognise revenue?
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How do we depreciate assets?
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When do we make provisions?
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How do we treat foreign currency transactions?
In other words:
Accounting policies explain how management turns business activity into financial numbers.
They are not about theory—they are about consistency and clarity.
Why Accounting Policies Matter So Much in Audits
Auditors do not audit businesses—they audit financial statements. To do that, they need to understand:
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What rules management applies
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Whether those rules are reasonable
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Whether they are applied consistently
Regulators such as Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority expect financial statements to be prepared using appropriate and consistently applied accounting policies that result in a true and fair view.
When policies are unclear, auditors must:
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Ask more questions
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Challenge assumptions
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Perform additional testing
This is where audit friction begins.
Common SME Misconception: “Our Accountant Knows What to Do”
Many SME directors believe:
“Our accountant handles accounting policies.”
While accountants help document policies, policies are management decisions, not auditor or accountant decisions.
Auditors assess:
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Whether policies reflect the business reality
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Whether management understands them
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Whether they are applied deliberately—not accidentally
If management cannot explain why a policy exists, auditors become uncomfortable.
The Most Common Accounting Policy Weaknesses in SMEs
1. Policies That Are Copied and Forgotten
Many SMEs use:
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Generic templates
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Boilerplate disclosures
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Policies copied from unrelated businesses
Auditors often see policies that:
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Do not match actual practice
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Contradict how transactions are recorded
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Are outdated
This immediately triggers audit questions.
2. Inconsistent Application Year to Year
Examples include:
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Changing depreciation methods without explanation
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Switching revenue recognition approaches
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Altering provision methodologies casually
Auditors expect consistency, not perfection.
3. Policies That Are Too Vague
Statements like:
“Revenue is recognised when appropriate.”
mean nothing in an audit.
Auditors need:
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Clear triggers
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Clear timing
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Clear treatment
Vagueness equals risk.
Key Accounting Policies Auditors Focus On (For SMEs)
Not all policies carry equal risk. Auditors usually focus on judgment-heavy areas.
Revenue Recognition
Auditors ask:
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When is revenue recognised?
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Is it based on delivery, completion, or invoicing?
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Are there multiple performance obligations?
Poorly defined revenue policies are one of the top audit friction points.
Accruals and Provisions
Auditors expect policies that explain:
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What types of accruals are recognised
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How estimates are determined
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When provisions are recorded or reversed
Without this, auditors must re-evaluate management judgment from scratch.
Fixed Assets and Depreciation
Policies should clearly state:
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Capitalisation thresholds
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Depreciation methods
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Useful lives
Changing useful lives without justification is a common audit issue.
Impairment of Receivables
Auditors look for:
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How doubtful debts are assessed
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Whether ageing or customer-specific reviews are used
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Whether policies reflect actual recovery patterns
Flat percentages without rationale invite scrutiny.
Foreign Currency Transactions
For SMEs with overseas dealings:
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Which exchange rates are used?
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How are FX differences treated?
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When are balances retranslated?
This area frequently causes avoidable audit adjustments.
Why Good Accounting Policies Reduce Audit Work
Clear policies allow auditors to:
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Understand management intent quickly
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Test compliance efficiently
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Reduce back-and-forth questions
From an audit perspective:
Clear policies = lower risk = smoother audit
Auditors are far more comfortable auditing well-documented judgment than undocumented decisions.
How to Set Up Practical Accounting Policies (Without Overengineering)
Step 1: Base Policies on What You Actually Do
Do not write policies you cannot follow.
Ask:
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How do we really recognise revenue?
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How do we actually approve expenses?
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How do we currently assess bad debts?
Then document that reality—not an idealised version.
Step 2: Keep Policies Simple and Specific
Good policies are:
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Short
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Clear
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Business-specific
Example:
“Revenue from service contracts is recognised monthly based on services performed, as evidenced by service reports approved by customers.”
This is far better than a generic paragraph.
Step 3: Apply Policies Consistently
Auditors value consistency more than cleverness.
If a policy needs to change:
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Document the reason
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Disclose the change
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Apply it consistently going forward
Undocumented changes raise red flags.
Step 4: Align Policies With Financial Statement Disclosures
Policies disclosed in the notes must:
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Match actual accounting treatment
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Be updated when practices change
Auditors often test this alignment directly.
Accounting Policies vs Accounting Estimates (Important Distinction)
SMEs often confuse these two.
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Accounting policy: the rule (e.g. depreciate over 5 years)
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Accounting estimate: the amount (e.g. this year’s depreciation)
Auditors expect:
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Stable policies
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Estimates that reflect current conditions
Changing estimates is normal. Changing policies casually is not.
How Weak Policies Increase Audit Fees (Quietly)
Even if auditors do not explicitly say so, weak policies:
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Increase audit hours
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Increase review work
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Increase partner involvement
This often shows up as:
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Longer audits
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More queries
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Higher fees over time
Good policies are a cost-control tool, not an administrative burden.
Director Responsibility (Often Overlooked)
Directors approve the financial statements. This means they:
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Accept the accounting policies
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Endorse management judgment
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Are responsible for consistency
Auditors may ask directors:
“Do you understand and agree with these policies?”
Silence or confusion weakens governance perception.
When Auditors Push Back on Policies
Auditors may challenge policies if:
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They do not reflect business reality
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They appear aggressive
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They change profit outcomes without justification
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They contradict accounting standards
This is not adversarial—it is part of audit duty.
Well-thought-out policies usually withstand scrutiny.
Signs Your SME Needs Better Accounting Policies
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Same audit comments every year
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Repeated adjustments
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Frequent “why is this treated this way?” questions
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Late-stage audit disputes
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Confusion between management and accountants
These are policy problems—not audit problems.
Why Accounting Policies Improve More Than Just Audits
Strong accounting policies also:
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Improve internal decision-making
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Support bank discussions
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Reduce staff confusion
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Strengthen governance
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Prepare the business for growth or exit
They are foundational—not optional.
Final Thoughts
Accounting policies are not about satisfying auditors. They are about clarity, consistency, and control.
For Singapore SMEs, the fastest way to reduce audit friction is not to argue with auditors—but to:
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Set clear policies
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Apply them consistently
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Document judgment properly
When policies are aligned with reality and understood by management, audits become confirmation exercises, not interrogation sessions.