Audit Report
Definition
Independent opinion produced after an internal or external audit. Issued by the auditor at the end of the engagement and presented to shareholders, banks, and the licensing authority where required.
Also known as
- Auditor's Report
- Independent Auditor's Report
- Audit Opinion
- Audit Certificate
Attributes
| Type | Document |
|---|---|
| Issued by | Licensed auditor |
| Governing standard | International Standards on Auditing (ISA) |
| Typical recipients | Shareholders, banks, licensing authorities |
| Associated with | Financial Statements, External Audit, Statutory Audit |
What it is
An Audit Report is the independent opinion the external auditor issues at the end of an engagement on whether the audited financial statements give a true and fair view under IFRS. The four standard opinions are: unqualified (clean), qualified (specific issue), adverse (statements don't fairly present), and disclaimer (auditor cannot form an opinion). The report includes the opinion section, basis for opinion, key audit matters, and the responsibilities of management and the auditor.
Key characteristics
- Standard
- ISA 700 (Revised) — Forming an Opinion
- Opinions
- Unqualified, qualified, adverse, disclaimer
- Audience
- Shareholders, banks, licensing authority, FTA
- Includes
- Key Audit Matters (KAMs) for listed/regulated entities
How it works
- The auditor plans the engagement, assessing risk and materiality based on the entity's size and complexity.
- Fieldwork is performed: testing transactions, verifying balances, confirming receivables and payables, and reviewing supporting documentation.
- The auditor evaluates whether financial statements were prepared in accordance with the applicable financial reporting framework, typically IFRS in the UAE.
- An opinion is formed and documented in the audit report: unqualified (clean), qualified, adverse, or disclaimer of opinion.
- The signed report is delivered to management and, where required, filed with the relevant free zone authority, bank, or regulator.
Types of Audit Report
| Type | Description | When it applies |
|---|---|---|
| Unqualified (Clean) Opinion | Financial statements give a true and fair view without reservation. | Books are accurate, complete, and comply with IFRS and applicable laws. |
| Qualified Opinion | Financial statements are fairly presented except for a specific matter. | A limitation or disagreement exists that is material but not pervasive. |
| Adverse Opinion | Financial statements do not give a true and fair view. | Misstatements are both material and pervasive, indicating serious issues. |
| Disclaimer of Opinion | The auditor does not express an opinion due to insufficient evidence. | Scope limitations prevent the auditor from obtaining necessary evidence. |
Examples
A DMCC-registered trading company must submit its audit report within 90 days of its financial year-end to renew its commercial license. A mainland LLC with a banking facility must provide an annual audit report to satisfy loan covenant conditions. A Dubai-based hospitality group undergoing FTA tax audit presents its audited financial statements and accompanying audit report as primary evidence of taxable income accuracy.
Why it matters
A qualified or adverse audit report blocks license renewal in audit-mandatory free zones and signals problems to banks and the FTA. The opinion is read first before anyone reads the numbers.
Common misconceptions
Misconception
An audit report guarantees the company is financially healthy.
Reality
The report opines on financial statement accuracy, not future viability or business performance.
Misconception
Only large companies need audit reports in the UAE.
Reality
Most free zones and mainland licensing authorities require audit reports regardless of company size.
Misconception
Any accountant can sign an audit report.
Reality
Only a UAE-licensed auditor or audit firm registered with the relevant authority can issue a valid report.
FAQs
- What's a 'qualified' audit report?
- An opinion that the financial statements are fair except for specific items the auditor flags — typically inventory the auditor couldn't observe, going-concern uncertainty, or specific IFRS departures. Treated more seriously than clean but less than adverse. Banks and free-zone authorities query qualified reports before accepting them.
See also
- External Audit
- Internal Audit
- Financial Statements
- IFRS(International Financial Reporting Standards)
- Audit Services(Best Solution service)
Sources
External references
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