Audit attention often follows risk, not size. In Malaysia, statutory rules under the Companies Act 2016 mean every company must appoint an auditor each financial year unless an exemption applies under Section 267(2). Small private firms can still draw scrutiny if records or compliance raise flags.
This guide sets expectations for founders and directors of Sdn. Bhd. entities. It explains when audits apply, what auditors review, and how SSM’s exemption framework operates in practice. Clear, defensible books remain essential even when a statutory audit is waived.
Practical preview: new rules from 2025 introduce phased thresholds and timing tied to financial year starts. The article will cover staying eligible as a company grows, what must be lodged with SSM, and typical LHDN expectations for tax filings.
Key Takeaways
- Audit risk is driven by compliance and records, not just company size.
- Statutory audit exemptions exist but do not replace good accounting.
- 2025 changes add qualifying thresholds and phased timing rules.
- Directors must know filing duties with SSM and common LHDN expectations.
- Practical checks help preserve exemption status as revenue or assets grow.
Why Small Businesses in Malaysia Still Get Audited
Perceived financial risk—not size—often drives requests for audited accounts. An audit raises confidence in financial statements when outsiders rely on numbers to make decisions.
Who asks for audits and why? Banks, investors, franchisors, and other stakeholders may require audited statements to lower their risk level before lending, investing, or signing contracts.
Accountability, duties, and common pressure points
Directors remain responsible for accurate records and regulatory compliance even when operations are simple. Good governance prevents problems later.
Typical triggers for audits include credit applications, vendor onboarding, share restructures, and preparing a sale. These events raise the practical need for verified accounts.
Trust through clean records
Clear bookkeeping, consistent policies, and transparent transactions build trust and reduce friction when stakeholders request assurance.
Remember: audit exemption is a policy tool to reduce costs for SMEs, not a license for casual reporting. Maintaining tidy financials keeps options open and lowers the chance of surprise audits.
What an Audit Actually Covers in Your Financial Statements
Auditing looks beyond totals: it verifies the transactions and controls that produce the figures.
What auditors look for in statements, records, and controls
Auditors test whether financial statements are fairly presented and prepared under applicable accounting standards. They seek supporting information for balances and disclosures.
Evidence reviewed includes invoices, bank statements, contracts, payroll summaries, and reconciliations. Sampling and testing validate that transactions posted to the statement reflect real activity.
The difference between errors, misstatements, and fraud indicators
Errors are typically accidental omissions or calculation slips. Misstatements become serious when they are material, even without intent.
Fraud indicators are red flags: missing source documents, altered records, unexplained entries, or control overrides. When such signs appear, auditors expand testing and seek extra evidence.
Why management matters: auditors rely on management representations and explanations, but independent support is required. Better controls and cleaner records reduce audit adjustments, shorten audit time, and lower the risk of adverse findings.
Malaysia’s Baseline Rule Under the Companies Act 2016
The Companies Act 2016 sets a clear baseline: a company should engage an auditor each financial year unless an exemption applies.
Operationally, “default” means: unless a private company fits an exempt category and formally elects that status, an audit will apply for the relevant years. Treat appointment of an auditor as the starting assumption when preparing annual accounts.
The Registrar’s power under Section 267(2) provides the legal bridge for SSM to publish exemption criteria. That power allows authorities to create category-based rules and practice directives that describe who may skip an audit.
Key points:
- Exemptions are category-driven and follow published criteria, not ad hoc approvals.
- Eligibility must be checked each year, since revenue, employee count, or asset growth can change status.
- Even when exempt, basic compliance and record-keeping remain essential.
This framework gives small companies a practical path to lower audit costs while keeping accountability. The next section explains how SSM implements those exemption rules in practice.
How the SSM Audit Exemption Framework Works
Policy makers introduced an exemption regime that balances cost relief with ongoing accountability.
Why the exemption exists
The audit exemption aims to cut compliance costs for micro and small private companies while keeping responsible record-keeping in place. Eligible smes may save on statutory audit fees and redirect funds toward operations and growth.
When it began and why it matters
The framework has been in effect since 4 August 2017. It matters because many small businesses still face heavy compliance burdens that affect cash flow and agility.
Industry context and practical impact
Malaysia has far more active companies than approved auditors. As of 30 Nov 2024 there were 689,134 active companies and 1,947 approved auditors. That equals about one auditor for every 354 companies.
| Metric | Count | Meaning for smes |
|---|---|---|
| Active companies | 689,134 | High demand for audit services |
| Approved auditors | 1,947 | Limited audit capacity |
| Auditor : company ratio | 1 : 354 | Tighter deadlines, higher fees |
Limited capacity can raise costs and slow reporting for small firms. The exemption helps eligible companies avoid mandatory statutory services while keeping financial information credible.
Next step: even when exemption applies, certain stakeholders may still request audited financial statements for assurance.
You Don’t Need to Be Big to Be Audited
External reliance, not company scale, frequently drives demands for an auditor’s sign-off.
“Exempt from audit” doesn’t mean “exempt from accountability.”
Accurate financial information, supporting documents, and simple internal controls remain essential. Management must keep clear records that can be produced when stakeholders ask for verification.
How stakeholders use audited financial statements for assurance
Lenders use an audit to assess repayment capacity and loan risk. Investors seek confidence in governance and future forecasts.
Business partners or franchisors often request an independent report before signing agreements. An audit provides standardized assurance that closes information gaps.
Unaudited accounts are not always distrusted. Still, outsiders may ask more questions, request additional schedules, or apply stricter terms when assurance is absent.
| Stakeholder | Purpose | Typical request |
|---|---|---|
| Bank | Assess credit risk | Audited financial statements, cash flow projections |
| Investor | Evaluate governance | Audit report, management explanations |
| Partner | Confirm stability | Financial information, audited financial or extra schedules |
Later sections explain how to lodge documents with SSM and keep exemption status while meeting stakeholder assurance needs.
New Audit Exemption Criteria Starting With Financial Periods From 2025
From 2025, eligibility for skipping a statutory audit depends on when a company’s financial period begins, not when reports are filed.
When the new criteria become applicable
Timing rule: the audit exemption criteria apply according to the start date of the annual period. If the annual period commences on or after 1 January 2025, PD 10/2024 governs eligibility.
Conversely, PD 3/2017 still applies for annual periods that commence on or before 31 December 2024. Submission date or year‑end alone does not change which policy applies.
How PD 10/2024 and PD 3/2017 work across start dates
Simple examples clarify the difference:
- Company A starts its year on 1 Jan 2025 — PD 10/2024 applies for that annual period.
- Company B starts on 1 Oct 2024 and ends 30 Sep 2025 — PD 3/2017 applies because the period commenced in 2024.
- Company C starts on 1 Apr 2025 — PD 10/2024 is the controlling guidance.
Plan ahead: directors should review eligibility before year‑end. The “current and past years” assessment uses measured results at specified dates, so early threshold tracking matters.
Track thresholds early when revenue growth is expected. This allows a deliberate choice: elect audit exemption or proceed with an audit. Next, the numeric thresholds for the phased approach (2025–2027) outline the compliance checklist.
Audit Exemption Thresholds for Revenue, Total Assets, and Employees
Thresholds set clear cutoffs that determine if a private company can skip a statutory audit in a given period.
Phase thresholds (turnover / total assets / employees):
| Phase (start date) | Turnover | Total assets | Employees (number) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 (1 Jan–31 Dec 2025) | RM1,000,000 | RM1,000,000 | 10 |
| 2026 (1 Jan–31 Dec 2026) | RM2,000,000 | RM2,000,000 | 20 |
| 2027 onward (from 1 Jan 2027) | RM3,000,000 | RM3,000,000 | 30 |
How the “meet at least two of three” rule works:
- If turnover and employees are under the thresholds, the exemption applies even when assets exceed the cap.
- If assets and turnover meet the limits, a slightly higher headcount will not block eligibility.
- Meeting any two criteria across revenue, assets and employees secures the exemption for that qualifying year.
Assessment window: eligibility is judged using the current year plus the immediate past years as required by the guidance. This rolling check prevents short-term dips from creating a false sense of security.
“Losing eligibility affects future years, but qualifying years remain exempt.”
Planning checklist: track monthly revenue run-rate, keep a year-end asset list for big purchases, and adopt a consistent method to count employees. Forecast growth so thresholds are not crossed by surprise.
Which Companies Are Excluded From Audit Exemption
Certain private companies cannot use the audit exemption, regardless of size or turnover.
Excluded categories at a glance
- Subsidiaries of public companies — these companies are not eligible for the audit exemption.
- Foreign companies operating locally — cross‑border reporting rules remove eligibility.
- Exempt private companies that lodge an EPC certificate instead of financial statements.
Why subsidiaries of public companies are treated differently
Subsidiaries of public groups fall under higher public‑interest expectations. Group reporting and investor transparency require stronger oversight.
This higher baseline protects stakeholders and supports consolidated reporting for the parent company.
Foreign companies and other excluded categories
Foreign structures face extra regulatory checks and are generally outside the exemption framework. That reflects the need for consistent cross‑border reporting and local compliance.
How EPC lodging affects company accounts
An exempt private company that files an EPC certificate cannot also elect the exemption under PD guidance. If the same company instead lodges unaudited company accounts, it may qualify when criteria are met.
So what this means: the chosen lodgment path changes what documents are prepared and which accounting rules apply. Even without a statutory audit, solid accounting and adherence to accounting standards preserve credibility and ease future financing.
| Excluded Category | Main Reason | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Subsidiary of public company | Investor and group reporting needs | Must prepare audited statements per group policies |
| Foreign company | Cross‑border reporting & local rules | Additional filings; no exemption |
| Exempt Private Company (EPC) with EPC certificate | Files certificate instead of accounts | Cannot elect audit exemption; alternative lodgment required |
Dormant Companies and Audit Exemption
A dormant company may qualify for relief when activity has been minimal across defined reporting periods.
What “dormant” means in practice: companies with no significant accounting transactions, no active trade, and only minimal movements for maintenance qualify. This status covers firms dormant since incorporation or dormant in the current financial year and the immediate past years under the framework.
Common pitfalls: the dormant position can be broken by issuing invoices, paying salaries, signing new contracts, or recording operational expenses beyond upkeep. Such actions may trigger an audit or remove exemption eligibility.
Practical benefits and governance habits
Eligible companies can reduce costs and administrative time through the exemption. Still, good records are essential if the company plans to reactivate later.
- Document board resolutions that confirm dormant status.
- Keep a clean bank account trail showing minimal transactions.
- Review activity at year‑end so the dormant test for years is clear.
Next step: follow SSM lodgment rules even when exempt and maintain basic compliance to avoid surprises in future audits.
What to Lodge With SSM When You Elect Audit Exemption
Choosing audit exemption changes the lodgment path, not the record-keeping standard.
Exact lodgment set: a company must lodge unaudited financial statements, a directors’ report, and a certificate of compliance. These items are required under Section 254 of the Companies Act 2016 and form the official submission to SSM.
Timing rules and the 30-day requirement
- Prepare and finalise the financial statements and directors’ report according to Companies Act timelines.
- Circulate the statements and report to members as required.
- Lodge the package with SSM within 30 days of circulation.
Approved standards and practical filing notes
Statements lodged must follow applicable approved accounting standards. Compliance with accounting standards is mandatory even when no auditor signs off.
MBRS practicalities: submission via MBRS is the usual route. Expect service provider fees; a common estimate is around RM1,000 depending on scope.
What good unaudited accounts look like: reconciled bank balances, clear fixed asset lists, proper revenue recognition, and defensible accruals. These elements make the information credible for stakeholders and regulators.

| Document | Purpose | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Unaudited financial statements | Present company performance and position | Within 30 days after circulation |
| Directors’ report | Explain operations, risks, and decisions | Circulate with statements |
| Certificate of compliance | Confirm statutory requirements met | Include in SSM lodgment |
Election of exemption shifts who verifies accounts; it does not remove the obligation to prepare accurate accounts.
How to Elect Audit Exemption Without Filing a Separate Application
A company may claim audit relief simply by meeting PD 10/2024 thresholds and recording the decision.
What electing should look like inside the business
No separate SSM form is required. Eligibility flows from meeting the thresholds and formally electing that status at board level.
Document the choice with a directors’ resolution that cites the assessment date. Attach calculation schedules for turnover, assets, and headcount.
Governance steps and working papers
- Record a directors’ resolution and circulate it to management and the finance team.
- Keep a working paper file with monthly run‑rates, asset lists, and staff counts for current and prior years.
- Issue clear instructions to external accountants or internal finance about lodgment and statement preparation.
Why some companies still hire an auditor: voluntary audit services provide external assurance for lenders, investors, or partner checks. A timely audit can be cheaper than delays from funding hurdles or repeated due diligence.
“Electing relief does not remove the duty to prepare accurate accounts; robust records make any future audit faster and cheaper.”
| Action | Purpose | Who signs off |
|---|---|---|
| Directors’ resolution | Formal election and record | Board |
| Threshold working papers | Evidence for eligibility | Management & finance |
| Voluntary audit | Extra assurance for stakeholders | Engaged auditor |
Next: reconcile how this choice affects tax filings and LHDN expectations in the following section.
Income Tax and LHDN: Do You Still Need Audited Accounts?
Tax filings follow a different legal path than company registrations, and that split matters for small firms.
How the two regimes link
SSM enforces company lodgments under the Companies Act. LHDN enforces income tax under the Income Tax Act 1967. The legal hooks differ, so meeting one set of rules does not automatically satisfy the other.
Practical position from the tax authority
LHDN’s audited-accounts rule sits in subsection 77A(4) of the Income Tax Act 1967 and is separate from Companies Act duties. LHDN announced that if a firm is not required to submit audited accounts to SSM, subsection 77A(4) would not apply. That means many exempt companies may file tax returns without an audit report.
Filing with management accounts and Form C
In practice, many SMEs submit Form C using final management accounts. Ensure the accounts reconcile to tax schedules and that supporting information is available if tax authorities ask.
Remember: exemption from SSM audit does not remove the need for substantiation. LHDN can query deductions, related-party items, or unusual movements and request supporting documents.
For complex facts—group structures, incentives, grants—confirm directly with LHDN or a licensed tax agent for tailored guidance.
When audit relief applies for company filings, maintain clear books so tax questions can be answered quickly.
How to Count Employees for the Thresholds
A clear headcount snapshot at financial year‑end determines whether the employee threshold is met.
Full‑time employee definition under PD 10/2024
Exact test: a paid worker who works not less than 6 hours per day for at least 20 days in a month, or at least 120 hours in a month.
Who is included and who is excluded
Include local and foreign staff, contract workers, and probationary employees when tallying the employee number.
Exclude directors and shareholders even if they work full time. Also exclude unpaid or irregularly paid family or friends.
Practical tracking methods to avoid mistakes at year‑end
Maintain a monthly headcount register linked to payroll. Reconcile the register with EPF/SOCSO records where applicable.
Centralize employment contracts and run a short year‑end confirmation to capture the exact number at the end of the financial period. This helps meet the thresholds and avoids compliance issues later.
| Method | Owner | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Headcount register | HR / Finance | Monthly |
| Payroll reconciliation | Payroll officer | Monthly |
| Year‑end snapshot & sign‑off | Directors & HR | Once per financial year |
“Accurate headcounts protect an exemption claim and reduce surprises when accounting and compliance checks occur.”
When an Audit Still Makes Sense Even If You Qualify for Exemption
Meeting regulatory thresholds is only part of the story; practical financing and contracting often demand external verification.
Bank loans and investor checks
Banks and lenders commonly require audited financial statements as part of credit approval. They use the report to assess cash flow quality, covenant comfort, and the sustainability of earnings.
Investors rely on the same evidence when valuing risk and negotiating terms. An audit shortens due diligence and can unlock higher limits or lower interest rates.
Other commercial and grant demands
Franchisors, major suppliers offering trade credit, and many grant bodies insist on audited accounts for transparency. These parties treat an independent report as assurance that figures are reliable.
Governance and performance benefits
An external audit often surfaces control weaknesses and process improvements. Recommendations improve month-to-month performance tracking and reduce leakage.
- Consider cost vs value: an audit can pay for itself by speeding up funding or improving loan terms.
- Decision rule: plan an audit if expansion, fundraising, or large contracts are likely in the next 12–24 months.
“An audit can be a strategic investment that converts statutory relief into real commercial opportunity.”
Understanding Audit Reports and the Four Types of Audit Opinions
Audit opinions act as a traffic light for financial trust: green, amber, or red depending on findings.
What an audit report is: a formal communication by an auditor that states whether the financial statements audited are fairly presented under the applicable reporting framework. This report gives assurance to lenders, investors, and partners about reliability.

Unqualified (clean) opinion
An unqualified opinion means the auditor found no material misstatements. The report signals strong confidence in the company’s controls and disclosure. Lenders and partners treat this outcome as clear assurance for credit and deals.
Qualified opinion
A qualified opinion arises when a material issue exists but is not pervasive. Examples include one area with missing evidence or a single account misstated. The auditor reports the exception while confirming the rest of the financial statements audited are acceptable.
Adverse opinion
An adverse opinion means material and pervasive misstatements make the statements unreliable. This outcome severely affects creditor confidence, may breach covenants, and often restricts access to capital.
Disclaimer of opinion
A disclaimer occurs when auditors cannot obtain sufficient evidence and cannot form an opinion. The result creates serious red flags for stakeholders and can trigger extra due diligence or refusal of financing.
“Understanding these opinions helps directors anticipate how audit outcomes can affect negotiations, covenants, and reputation.”
| Opinion | Meaning | Practical impact |
|---|---|---|
| Unqualified | Fairly presented | Higher trust; easier access to finance |
| Qualified | Limited issue | Clarify and correct; some lender questions |
| Adverse | Not reliable | Loss of confidence; financing constrained |
| Disclaimer | No opinion | Serious red flags; additional checks |
Audit Findings That Trigger Action: Criteria, Condition, Cause, Consequence
A finding should map what was expected, what was found, why it happened, and what it means.
How auditors structure findings so issues become fixable
Auditors frame each finding using four parts: criteria, condition, cause, and consequence.
Criteria state the standard or expectation. Condition records the observed state. Cause explains why the gap appeared. Consequence describes the impact on reporting or controls.
Building corrective action plans that reduce repeat findings
Findings matter because they give management a plan, not just a critique.
- Assign an owner and deadline for each corrective step.
- List measurable actions and the evidence that will show completion.
- Schedule a follow‑up review to verify improved performance.
Example for SMEs: missing supporting invoices (condition) vs. recordkeeping rules (criteria), caused by informal approval flows (cause), leading to tax delays and extra fees (consequence).
“Treat findings as a roadmap for continuous improvement rather than a one‑off checklist.”
| Element | What it shows | Practical step |
|---|---|---|
| Criteria | Expected standard | Document policies and cite the standard |
| Condition | Observed issue | Record sample evidence and dates |
| Cause | Root reason | Identify process or resourcing gaps |
| Consequence | Impact on reports | Quantify risk and cost |
Conclusion
Stakeholder reliance on credible financial records drives most audit demands for smaller businesses.
, The central takeaway: in Malaysia, audits respond to risk, legal duty, and outside needs rather than mere company size. Companies Act 2016 sets the baseline that an auditor is normally appointed each year, while SSM’s exemption framework gives eligible private companies relief under defined thresholds.
From 2025 the phased thresholds and the timing rule tied to the financial period start create clearer planning horizons. If eligibility is lost, future years can lose the right to claim exemption, though previously qualifying years remain exempt.
Prepare accurate statements, keep supporting records, and track revenue, assets, and headcount early. For planned loans, investors, or big contracts, consider a voluntary audit for extra assurance.
