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The Companies Commission of Malaysia (SSM) introduced audit exemption under the Companies Act 2016, which came into effect on 31 January 2017. However, the specific guidelines on audit exemption were issued later through the Practice Directive 3/2017, which was published on 4 August 2017 and became effective for financial periods ending on or after 31 December 2017.
Objectives
Current Criteria
3.Zero Revenue Companies: Companies must fulfil the following requirements for the current Statement of Financial Position as well as in the immediate past two financial years: –
NEW Qualifying Criteria
A private company qualifies for audit exemption if it fulfils any two (2) of the following criteria:
Implementation Stages
Year | 2025 (Phase 1) |
2026 (Phase 2) |
2027 (Phase 3) |
Financial Period | Commencing from 1st January until 31st December 2025 | Commencing from 1st January until 31st December 2026 | Commencing from 1st January 2027 onwards |
Financial Statement Submission Year: | Beginning from 1st January 2026 | Beginning from 1st January 2027 | Beginning from 1st January 2028 |
Thresholds: | |||
|
RM1,000,000 | RM2,000,000 | RM3,000,000 |
|
RM1,000,000 | RM2,000,000 | RM3,000,000 |
|
10 | 20 | 30 |
Other Conditions
3.Where a company ceases to be qualified for audit exemption, it shall thereupon cease to be exempted but the company shall remain exempted in relation to the accounts for the financial years in which it qualifies.
* The other conditions remain the same as those outlined in the existing practice directive.
Implication
Number of eligible companies under this proposal does not take into consideration the number of employees employed by companies.
Companies with existing commitments to those institutions or plans to secure funding facilities may need to continue auditing financial statements to fulfil their obligations. Based on statistics as of October 2024 on charges registered with SSM, 34% of active companies are having unsatisfied charges and may continue to audit their financial statements.
Certain agencies such as government or other relevant authorities might have regulatory requirements that mandate submission of audited financial statement regardless of company or financial status.
Certain legal obligations such as contracts or grant might stipulate the need for audited accounts, making the company opt to continue with audit.
While the audit exemption offers certain benefits, it also raises certain practical considerations on various parties’ concerns about the accuracy, reliability and transparency of the unaudited financial statements. The decision to apply for audit exemption should be carefully evaluated based on the company’s size, financial complexity, stakeholder needs, and future business plans. While audit exemption reduces compliance costs, companies must ensure that financial governance remains strong to maintain trust and transparency.
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