Audit & Assurance · Specialised Audit & Certification
External Audit
Every mainland LLC and the overwhelming majority of UAE free zone entities must file an annual audited financial statement to renew their trade licence, satisfy their free zone authority, and support their UAE Corporate Tax return.
Chartered Accountants · Dubai · Since 1986
An external audit (also called a statutory audit or annual financial statement audit) is an independent examination of a company's complete set of financial statements — balance sheet, income statement, cash flow statement, and notes — performed by a chartered accountant or audit firm with no operational stake in the business, resulting in a signed opinion on whether those statements present a true and fair view in accordance with the applicable financial reporting framework, almost always IFRS in the UAE. It is governed by the full suite of International Standards on Auditing (ISA) issued by the IAASB, and by the independence and ethics requirements of the IESBA Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants.
In the UAE, external audit is not optional for most trading entities. Mainland companies registered under the UAE Commercial Companies Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 32 of 2021) are generally required to prepare and have audited annual financial statements, and the Department of Economy and Tourism (Dubai) and equivalent authorities in other emirates require evidence of this at trade licence renewal for most legal forms, particularly LLCs. Free zone authorities go further still — JAFZA, DMCC, RAKEZ, IFZA, Meydan Free Zone, ADGM, DIFC, RAK ICC, and Ajman Free Zone each mandate audited financial statements as a condition of annual licence renewal, with the audit firm typically required to be on the free zone's approved auditor panel. Since the UAE Corporate Tax regime under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 took effect for financial years starting on or after 1 June 2023, audited financial statements have also become the primary evidentiary basis most Taxable Persons rely on to support their Corporate Tax return filed with the Federal Tax Authority — particularly for entities claiming Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) status, where the Federal Tax Authority's guidance treats audited financials as standard supporting evidence of the arm's-length and substance conditions relied upon.
An external audit differs fundamentally from the narrower assurance engagements PNPC also performs in the UAE. Where a special purpose audit (ISA 800/805) reports on one defined account or fact pattern for one named recipient, and a stock audit verifies inventory alone, the external audit covers the complete set of financial statements as a whole and is designed for general reliance — by the licensing authority, the tax authority, banks, shareholders, and any other party the company chooses to share it with, subject to the standard auditor's report addressed to the shareholders. The scope is set by the financial statements themselves, not by a single counterparty's narrow question, and the resulting opinion (unmodified, qualified, adverse, or a disclaimer) speaks to the statements as a whole.
The audit itself follows risk-based methodology under the ISA suite: understanding the entity and its environment and assessing risks of material misstatement (ISA 315), determining materiality (ISA 320), designing and performing further audit procedures responsive to assessed risks (ISA 330), obtaining sufficient appropriate audit evidence through inspection, observation, confirmation, recalculation, and analytical procedures, and concluding with an opinion supported by a fully documented working paper file. For UAE engagements this typically includes external confirmation of bank balances directly with the bank, confirmation of material receivables and payables, physical observation of inventory counts where inventory is material, review of related-party transactions and disclosures, and — since Corporate Tax became effective — specific attention to the tax provision, deferred tax positions, and QFZP qualifying-income analysis where relevant.
What actually goes wrong without a properly scoped, properly timed external audit is rarely dramatic. It is a trade licence renewal blocked because the audited financials were not ready in time; a free zone authority rejecting a submission because the audit firm was not on its approved panel; a Corporate Tax return filed on unaudited management accounts that later cannot be reconciled to the eventual audited numbers; or a bank facility renewal stalling because the latest audited statements are months overdue. Each of these is avoidable with an audit planned to the entity's actual renewal calendar rather than commissioned reactively once a deadline is already close.
The deliverable is the auditor's report and a complete set of audited financial statements — the opinion, the basis for opinion, key audit matters where applicable, and the statements themselves with full notes — plus a management letter setting out control observations identified during the audit that fall outside the financial statements themselves, and a retained working paper file documented to professional standards. PNPC treats the annual external audit as a recurring relationship, not a once-a-year document handover: we track each client's specific licence renewal date, free zone submission window, and Corporate Tax filing deadline, and plan the audit calendar backward from those dates so the opinion is always ready before it is needed, not after.
When an external audit is required or advisable
Your mainland LLC's trade licence renewal with the Department of Economy and Tourism (or equivalent emirate authority) requires audited financial statements as a supporting document
Your free zone authority (JAFZA, DMCC, RAKEZ, IFZA, Meydan, ADGM, DIFC, RAK ICC, Ajman, or similar) mandates an annual audit by an approved auditor as a condition of licence renewal
You are a Taxable Person under UAE Corporate Tax and need audited financial statements to support the return filed with the Federal Tax Authority, particularly if claiming Qualifying Free Zone Person status
A bank financing your business requires audited annual financial statements as a covenant condition for an existing or new credit facility
Shareholders, a board, or a joint-venture partner require an independent annual opinion on the complete financial statements, not just a management-prepared set
Your company is preparing for a future sale, fresh investment round, or IPO and needs a clean multi-year audited financial statement history
Your first financial year has closed and this is your inaugural statutory audit — the baseline that all future audits and Corporate Tax filings will build on
You changed auditors and need continuity — professional clearance, opening balance verification, and a smooth handover so the new audit is not starting from a weaker evidentiary position
Your business has grown in complexity (new subsidiaries, related-party transactions, multiple revenue streams, inventory) since the last audit and last year's scope no longer fits
When a different engagement fits better
You need an opinion on one specific account, a net worth figure, or a fund utilisation report for a single named recipient — that is a special purpose audit under ISA 800/805, not a full external audit
You only need physical verification of inventory for a bank's drawing-power calculation — that is a stock audit, narrower and faster than a full financial statement audit
You need routine bookkeeping, monthly management accounts, or VAT/Corporate Tax return preparation — those are accounting and tax compliance services, not an assurance engagement
You are looking for a forensic investigation into suspected fraud or a specific allegation — that requires a forensic accounting engagement with a different scope, methodology, and standard than a financial statement audit
Your entity is dormant with no transactions and your free zone authority explicitly accepts a dormant company declaration in place of a full audit — confirm this exception in writing before skipping the audit
You only need limited assurance for a lender who will accept a review engagement (ISRE 2400) rather than a full audit opinion — faster and less costly if the recipient will accept it
You want an internal audit reviewing processes, risk, and controls across the business on an ongoing basis — that is a different, broader-scope, non-opinion-bearing engagement
You need a business valuation for a transaction or dispute — valuation is a separate discipline, though it typically uses audited financial statements as a key input
Your accounting records are so incomplete that no meaningful evidence base exists yet — bookkeeping remediation needs to happen first, sequenced ahead of the audit, or the engagement will end in a disclaimer of opinion that serves no one
External (statutory) audit vs. related UAE assurance engagements
| Feature | External Audit (Statutory) | Special Purpose Audit | Stock Audit | Internal Audit | Review Engagement (ISRE 2400) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary purpose | Opinion on complete financial statements as a whole | Opinion on one defined account, element, or fact pattern | Verify inventory existence, valuation, and controls only | Ongoing review of processes, risk, and controls | Limited assurance on financial statements, lighter than a full audit |
| Governing standard | Full ISA suite, IFRS reporting framework | ISA 800 / ISA 805 | ISA-aligned evidence standards, no dedicated ISA | No single ISA — scope set by internal mandate | ISRE 2400 (Revised) |
| Who requires it | Free zone/DED licensing authority, Federal Tax Authority (indirectly via Corporate Tax filing), shareholders | Bank, visa authority, grantor, buyer, or court on a named-recipient basis | Bank financing against stock, board, or transaction counterparty | Board/audit committee | Lender or management wanting comfort short of a full audit |
| Level of assurance | Reasonable assurance (positive opinion) | Reasonable assurance (positive opinion), scope-restricted | Evidence-based findings report, not a formal audit opinion | Varies by internal audit charter | Limited assurance (negative assurance conclusion) |
| Frequency | Annual, tied to financial year end and licence renewal | As triggered — one-off per request | As required, often quarterly/half-yearly for bank facilities | Continuous or periodic per audit plan | As agreed, often interim/quarterly |
| Report distribution | General purpose — addressed to shareholders, relied on by authority/bank/tax filing | Restricted to the specific named recipient(s) | Relied on by the commissioning bank/board specifically | Generally internal, occasionally shared with lenders | Restricted per engagement terms |
| Regulatory basis | UAE Commercial Companies Law and free zone company regulations mandate it for most entities | No mandate — contractual/discretionary, triggered by a specific request | No dedicated UAE statute; governed by engagement terms | No specific federal mandate; governance-driven | No mandate; voluntary or lender-contractual |
| Typical timeline | 4–8 weeks including planning, fieldwork, and sign-off | 1–4 weeks depending on scope and evidence availability | 3–5 weeks for a single-location, moderate-SKU business | Ongoing per audit plan cycle | 1–3 weeks |
Many UAE businesses need more than one of these in the same year — for example, an external statutory audit for licence renewal and Corporate Tax support, plus a bank-mandated stock audit for a working-capital facility. They are complementary, not substitutes for one another.
How a PNPC Global UAE statutory external audit engagement runs, start to finish
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What Authorities and Banks Actually Check For | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Engagement scoping call — confirm entity type, free zone or mainland status, financial year end, licence renewal date, and Corporate Tax filing deadline | Whether the audit calendar is planned backward from the actual renewal and filing deadlines, not treated as a generic annual exercise | 1-2 working days |
| 2 | Independence and approved-auditor check — confirm PNPC is (or can be added to) the client's free zone authority's approved auditor panel where one exists | Whether the appointed firm is actually eligible to submit to that specific free zone — a common, entirely avoidable rejection cause | 1-3 working days |
| 3 | Engagement letter issued defining scope, reporting framework (IFRS), materiality basis, and timeline | Clear, written scope so there is no ambiguity later about what the audit covered | 1-2 working days |
| 4 | Planning and risk assessment (ISA 315) — understand the entity, its industry, and its systems; identify risk areas (revenue recognition, related-party transactions, inventory, receivables) | Whether the audit plan is tailored to the entity's actual risk profile rather than a generic checklist | 3-5 working days |
| 5 | Materiality determination (ISA 320) and detailed audit programme design | Whether materiality is set appropriately for the entity's size and the users relying on the statements | 1-2 working days |
| 6 | External confirmations issued directly to banks, material debtors, and creditors | Whether confirmations are obtained independently by the auditor, not just accepted from client-provided balances | 1-3 weeks (bank/third-party turnaround is the critical path) |
| 7 | Substantive fieldwork — vouching of transactions, recalculation, analytical review, inventory observation where material, related-party transaction review | Depth and evidence trail behind every material balance, not just a sign-off on management's figures | 1-3 weeks depending on entity size and complexity |
| 8 | Corporate Tax and VAT cross-check — reconcile the tax provision, deferred tax position, and QFZP qualifying-income analysis (where relevant) against FTA filings via EmaraTax | Whether the audited numbers and the entity's actual Corporate Tax/VAT filing history are consistent — a common area of scrutiny given Corporate Tax's 2023 rollout | 2-4 working days |
| 9 | Draft financial statements and disclosures prepared under IFRS, with notes covering related parties, contingencies, and significant accounting policies | Whether disclosures are complete and specific to the entity, not boilerplate | 3-5 working days |
| 10 | Management representation letter obtained, confirming management has disclosed all relevant information | Whether management has formally taken responsibility for the completeness of information provided | 1-2 working days |
| 11 | Partner review and sign-off — independent second-partner review before the opinion is issued | Whether an independent reviewer, not just the engagement team, has checked the conclusion before it is signed | 2-3 working days |
| 12 | Final audited financial statements and auditor's report issued, in the format the free zone authority or DED requires | Whether the submission format matches exactly what the licensing portal or authority expects — a frequent cause of rejected renewal submissions | 1-2 working days |
| 13 | Management letter delivered separately, setting out control observations and recommendations identified during the audit | Whether findings beyond the financial statements themselves are captured and handed to management with clear ownership | At report issue |
| 14 | Licence renewal and Corporate Tax filing support — audited statements handed to the client's renewal and tax filing workflow with a confirmed submission checklist | Whether the audit output is actually usable immediately for the renewal portal and the Corporate Tax return, not requiring rework | As required by renewal/filing deadline |
| 15 | Next-cycle calendar set — following year's planning date, interim procedures date, and renewal deadline diarised at handover | Whether the client is set up to avoid a last-minute scramble at the next renewal, not just this year's | At handover |
A straightforward single-entity mainland or free zone company with clean records typically completes the full cycle in 4-6 weeks from engagement letter to signed opinion. Multi-entity groups, entities with material inventory or related-party complexity, or a first-year audit with weak opening records generally run 6-10 weeks. Bank and third-party confirmation turnaround is usually the single largest variable outside PNPC's direct control.
Trade licence (mainland DED licence or relevant free zone authority licence), current and valid as at the audit date
Memorandum and Articles of Association, or free zone incorporation/registration certificate
Shareholder register and any changes during the year (share transfers, capital increases)
Prior year's audited financial statements and auditor's report, for opening balance verification
Signed engagement letter and, where a change of auditor is involved, a professional clearance letter from the outgoing firm
Complete trial balance and general ledger for the financial year under audit
Bank statements for all accounts, plus signed bank balance confirmation letters obtained directly by the auditor
Sales and purchase invoices, along with supporting contracts for material transactions
Fixed asset register with additions, disposals, and depreciation workings for the year
Payroll records, WPS reports, and end-of-service benefit calculations for employee-related liabilities
UAE VAT registration certificate (TRN) and VAT return filings via EmaraTax for the financial year, for cross-checking against reported revenue
UAE Corporate Tax registration details and Tax Registration Number with the Federal Tax Authority
Corporate Tax computation workings, including any Qualifying Free Zone Person qualifying-income analysis, if applicable
Prior correspondence with the Federal Tax Authority, DED, or free zone authority regarding any open queries or notices
Board and shareholder resolutions passed during the financial year
Related-party transaction schedule, including intercompany balances, loans, and management fees
Details of any contingent liabilities, guarantees given or received, and pending legal claims
Group structure chart, where the entity is part of a wider group, for consolidation and disclosure purposes
Stock ledger and ageing analysis as at year end, where inventory is material to the balance sheet
Trade receivables ageing schedule and details of any provisions for doubtful debts
Trade payables listing and supplier statement reconciliations for material balances
Loan agreements, facility letters, and lease schedules for borrowings and lease liabilities under IFRS 16
Authority, registrar, free zone, bank, or property records relevant to the external audit.
Current licence, certificate, permit, title, visa, or filing status evidence where applicable.
Open queries, rejected applications, expired records, or pending amendments that may affect scope.
Management sign-off for assumptions, exceptions, and risk tolerance used in the external audit.
Approval trails, resolutions, meeting notes, or stakeholder instructions supporting the requested outcome.
Named client-side owner for each unresolved item after handover.
Preferred recipient and use of the final audited financial statements, because a free zone authority, DED, bank, or tax filing may need different formatting.
Prior reports, applications, renewals, certificates, or correspondence to preserve continuity.
Post-completion calendar for the next audit cycle, renewal deadline, and Corporate Tax filing date.
Ongoing external audit lifecycle for UAE companies
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| First-year (inaugural) audit | Company's first financial year has closed since incorporation | Establish clean opening balances, accounting policies, and a documented basis of preparation from day one — this is the baseline every future audit builds on | A weak first-year audit creates opening-balance uncertainty that follows the entity for years and complicates every subsequent audit |
| Recurring annual audit | Financial year end approaching, licence renewal or Corporate Tax filing deadline on the calendar | Plan the audit calendar backward from the actual renewal and filing dates, not just the financial year end | Reactive, last-minute audits increase both cost and the risk of a rejected or delayed licence renewal |
| Auditor change | Client switches audit firms, whether for cost, service, or independence reasons | Obtain professional clearance from the outgoing auditor and verify opening balances rigorously before accepting the appointment | Skipping proper handover procedures risks carrying forward an unverified or incorrect opening position |
| Free zone authority panel change | Free zone authority updates its approved auditor list or renewal submission requirements | Reconfirm PNPC's panel status and the authority's current submission format before each renewal cycle | A submission from a firm no longer on the current approved panel is rejected outright, regardless of audit quality |
| Corporate Tax filing coordination | Corporate Tax return due to the Federal Tax Authority, generally within nine months of financial year end | Sequence the audit to complete well ahead of the Corporate Tax filing deadline so the return is built on final, not draft, audited figures | Filing on management accounts that later differ from audited figures can require an amended return and draw FTA scrutiny |
| Bank facility renewal | Existing credit facility due for annual review | Provide the latest audited financial statements to the bank proactively, ahead of the facility's own review date | Stale audited financials weaken the renewal negotiation and can trigger a covenant review |
| Group structure change | New subsidiary added, entity restructured, or ownership changed during the year | Update the audit scope and consolidation approach (if applicable) to reflect the new structure before fieldwork begins | An audit scoped to the old structure misses new related-party balances and consolidation requirements |
| Complexity growth | Business adds new revenue streams, inventory, or material related-party transactions since the last audit | Re-scope the audit programme to reflect the entity's actual current risk profile, not last year's plan | An unchanged audit programme under-tests genuinely new risk areas, weakening the reliability of the opinion |
| Management letter follow-up | Prior audit identified control weaknesses or process gaps | Track management's corrective actions and verify implementation at the next audit cycle | Unresolved control weaknesses recur year after year and erode confidence in the entity's financial reporting discipline |
| Transaction or investment event | M&A, new investor, or IPO preparation requiring a clean multi-year audited history | Align the audit timetable with the transaction's due diligence calendar and ensure prior years' audits are consistent and complete | Gaps or inconsistencies across audit years undermine investor or acquirer confidence and can trigger price renegotiation |
Businesses that treat the external audit as a planned annual discipline — calendared against licence renewal, Corporate Tax filing, and bank review dates — consistently avoid the deadline pressure and rejected-submission risk that reactive, last-minute audits create.
Is an external audit mandatory for my UAE company?
For most mainland LLCs and the great majority of free zone entities, yes. Mainland companies registered under the UAE Commercial Companies Law generally must prepare audited financial statements, and most free zone authorities (JAFZA, DMCC, RAKEZ, IFZA, Meydan, ADGM, DIFC, RAK ICC, Ajman, and others) require an annual audit by an approved auditor as a condition of licence renewal. A small number of free zone categories or dormant-entity exceptions exist, but these should be confirmed in writing with the specific authority rather than assumed.
Does my audit firm need to be on a specific approved auditor panel?
Many UAE free zone authorities maintain an approved auditor panel and will only accept audited financial statements from a firm on that list. This is separate from the firm's general UAE audit licence — an otherwise properly licensed firm can still be rejected at renewal if it is not on that specific free zone's current panel.
What is the difference between an external audit and a special purpose audit?
An external audit covers the complete set of financial statements as a whole and is designed for general reliance by shareholders, the licensing authority, and the tax authority. A special purpose audit is scoped narrowly to one defined account, figure, or question — like a net worth certificate — for one named recipient, under ISA 800/805 rather than the full ISA suite applied to complete financial statements.
How does the external audit connect to UAE Corporate Tax filing?
Audited financial statements are the primary evidentiary basis most Taxable Persons rely on for their Corporate Tax return filed with the Federal Tax Authority. Corporate Tax under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 applies at 0% on taxable income up to AED 375,000 and 9% above that threshold, with Qualifying Free Zone Persons potentially eligible for 0% on qualifying income subject to conditions — audited statements are standard supporting evidence for that qualifying-income analysis.
How long does a UAE statutory external audit take?
A straightforward single-entity company with clean, complete records typically takes four to six weeks from engagement letter to signed opinion. Multi-entity groups, businesses with material inventory or related-party complexity, or a first-year audit with weak opening records generally take six to ten weeks.
What does the auditor actually check during fieldwork?
Fieldwork covers vouching of transactions to supporting documents, recalculation of balances, external confirmation of bank and material third-party balances, analytical review comparing figures against expectations and prior periods, physical observation of inventory counts where inventory is material, and review of related-party transactions, contracts, and disclosures — all scaled to the risk areas identified during planning.
What is the difference between an unmodified, qualified, and adverse opinion?
An unmodified (clean) opinion means the financial statements present a true and fair view with no material issues. A qualified opinion flags one or more specific matters that are material but not pervasive. An adverse opinion states the statements are materially misstated as a whole. A disclaimer of opinion means the auditor could not obtain sufficient evidence to form any opinion at all.
What happens if my company misses the licence renewal deadline because the audit is not ready?
Consequences depend on the specific free zone or DED category but can include late renewal penalties, a temporary hold on licence activities, or difficulty renewing related visas tied to the licence. This is why PNPC plans the audit calendar backward from the actual renewal date rather than treating the financial year end as the only relevant deadline.
Can PNPC audit a company that is part of a larger group with entities in India and the UAE?
Yes. PNPC operates from Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai, and for cross-border groups we coordinate the UAE statutory audit with any equivalent Indian audit requirement, keeping accounting policies, related-party disclosures, and reporting dates consistent across both jurisdictions rather than run as unrelated engagements by separate advisors.
What if this is our very first audit since incorporation?
A first-year (inaugural) audit needs particular attention to opening balances — since there is no prior audited year to rely on — and to establishing accounting policies and a documented basis of preparation that all future audits and Corporate Tax filings will build on.
How do I switch auditors without disrupting my licence renewal timeline?
We obtain a professional clearance letter from your outgoing auditor, verify opening balances rigorously against the prior audited financial statements, and plan the new engagement's timeline against your actual renewal date from the outset, so switching firms does not itself cause a delay.
Does PNPC issue a management letter separately from the audited financial statements?
Yes. Alongside the audited financial statements and auditor's report, we issue a separate management letter setting out control observations and process recommendations identified during the audit that fall outside the financial statements themselves — segregation of duties gaps, system access weaknesses, or documentation practices worth tightening.
How does VAT registration status factor into the external audit?
We verify the entity's VAT registration status and Tax Registration Number with the Federal Tax Authority via EmaraTax and cross-check VAT return filings against reported revenue during fieldwork — VAT is charged at the UAE's standard rate of 5% unless a specific zero-rating or exemption applies, and mandatory registration applies above AED 375,000 in taxable supplies (voluntary registration from AED 187,500).
What is the auditor's independence requirement, and does PNPC ever decline an engagement?
Full compliance with the IESBA International Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants applies to every statutory audit engagement, including independence in fact and appearance. We assess independence before accepting any appointment and decline engagements where an existing relationship or conflict of interest would compromise that independence.
How does related-party transaction review work during the audit?
We request a related-party transaction schedule covering intercompany balances, director or shareholder loans, and management fees, then test these against underlying agreements and evidence of arm's-length terms, since related-party balances are both a UAE Corporate Tax transfer-pricing consideration and a routine audit disclosure requirement under IFRS.
Does the external audit cover fixed assets and depreciation?
Yes — we review the fixed asset register, test additions and disposals during the year against supporting invoices and disposal documentation, and verify depreciation policies are applied consistently with the entity's stated accounting policy and IFRS requirements.
What if my company holds inventory — does the audit include a physical stock count?
Where inventory is material to the balance sheet, we attend and observe the physical inventory count (or a cycle count, depending on the entity's own count methodology) as part of the audit evidence for existence and condition, in addition to testing valuation under IAS 2.
How does PNPC handle IFRS 16 lease accounting during the audit?
We review lease agreements for office space, warehouses, vehicles, and equipment to confirm right-of-use assets and lease liabilities are recognised and measured correctly under IFRS 16, including the discount rate applied and the treatment of any lease modifications during the year.
What documents cause the most delay if not ready when fieldwork starts?
Incomplete bank statements, an unreconciled trial balance, missing supporting invoices for material transactions, and an outdated fixed asset register are the most common causes of delay. Bank balance confirmations, which the auditor must obtain directly rather than accept from client copies, are also frequently the longest lead-time item.
Can the external audit be expedited if my renewal deadline is close?
In most cases yes, provided records are reasonably complete and third-party confirmations can be obtained quickly — we prioritise time-sensitive renewal-driven audits and are transparent upfront about what is genuinely achievable given the evidence available, rather than accepting an unrealistic deadline and discovering the problem later.
Does PNPC coordinate the audit timeline with our Corporate Tax return filing deadline?
Yes — we plan the audit to complete well ahead of the Corporate Tax return deadline, which generally falls within nine months of the financial year end under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, so the return is filed on final audited figures rather than provisional numbers that later need reconciling with the auditor.
How much does a UAE statutory external audit cost?
Cost depends on the entity's size, transaction volume, complexity (inventory, related parties, multiple revenue streams, group structure), and the state of the underlying accounting records. PNPC agrees a fixed fee in writing after the scoping call, once these factors are understood, rather than quoting from a generic price list.
What if we disagree with a proposed audit adjustment?
We discuss every proposed adjustment with management, seek supporting evidence for management's position, and document the resolution — where management provides credible evidence, the adjustment is revised; where it does not, the adjustment stands and is reflected in the final financial statements or, if material and unresolved, in a qualified opinion.
Does PNPC retain the audit working papers after the report is issued, and for how long?
Yes. We retain the full working paper file — planning documentation, evidence obtained, and the basis for the opinion — per professional record-retention standards. Given the UAE Corporate Tax record-retention requirement under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, which requires Taxable Persons to keep relevant records for at least seven years after the end of the relevant tax period, we align our own retention practice to that same window for audit files that support a Corporate Tax position.
Why choose PNPC Global for a UAE statutory external audit over a smaller local firm?
PNPC Global has run statutory audit engagements since 1986 across India and the UAE, combining deep technical grounding in IFRS and ISA-based audit methodology with practical experience across trading, services, manufacturing, and holding structures common in the UAE market, plus panel presence with major free zone authorities.
PNPC Global vs. typical UAE external audit providers
| Factor | PNPC Global | Typical Small Local Firm | Big-4/Large International Firm |
|---|---|---|---|
| Renewal-calendar planning | Audit scheduled backward from the client's actual licence renewal and Corporate Tax filing dates | Often scheduled reactively once the client raises the deadline | Thorough planning but high minimum fees regardless of entity size |
| Free zone approved-panel presence | Registered with major UAE free zone authorities, confirmed before engagement start | Panel status not always proactively checked | Generally on major panels but slower turnaround for smaller mandates |
| Corporate Tax and VAT integration | Audit fieldwork cross-checks EmaraTax filings and Corporate Tax positions as standard | May treat tax reconciliation as a separate, later exercise | Available but typically billed as a distinct advisory workstream |
| Cross-border India-UAE capability | Single firm handles both jurisdictions for group companies | Rarely available | Available but typically at a much higher fee structure |
| Turnaround for recurring audits | Faster on repeat cycles once baseline data and relationship are established | Similar effort each cycle without process memory | Can be slower due to internal review layers for lower-fee engagements |
| Management letter included | Standard practice, not a separate paid add-on | Often omitted or charged separately | Included but can be generic/templated |
| Cost structure for SME clients | Scoped, transparent pricing suited to SME and mid-market entities | Can be inconsistent or ad hoc | Often cost-prohibitive for SME-scale engagements |
| Responsiveness on emerging issues | Issues affecting the opinion communicated immediately, not held for the final report | Varies by firm discipline | Generally rigorous but slower due to internal escalation protocols |
| Evidence discipline | Traces every material balance to source documents and independent confirmations | Often accepts client summaries at face value | Rigorous, but with high minimum fees regardless of engagement size |
| Continuity | Sets next-cycle renewal and filing calendar at handover | Stops once the report is delivered | Available, but continuity support is typically a separate paid engagement |
PNPC Global positions itself between the informality of very small local providers and the process-heavy overhead of the largest international firms — rigorous ISA-based evidence standards at a cost and turnaround suited to UAE SME and mid-market businesses.
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Initial scoping call confirming entity type, free zone/mainland status, financial year end, and every relevant renewal and filing deadline
- 02
Confirmation and, where needed, registration on the client's specific free zone authority's approved auditor panel
- 03
Full risk-based audit under the ISA suite, including external bank and third-party confirmations
- 04
IFRS-compliant financial statements and disclosures, including related-party, contingency, and lease (IFRS 16) treatment
- 05
Corporate Tax and VAT cross-check against EmaraTax filings, including QFZP qualifying-income review where relevant
- 06
Physical inventory observation where stock is material to the balance sheet
- 07
Separate management letter with control observations and practical recommendations
- 08
Audit report and financial statements formatted to the specific free zone authority or DED renewal submission requirement
- 09
Coordination with the client's Corporate Tax filing timeline so the return is built on final audited figures
- 10
Cross-border coordination for India-UAE group companies through a single advisory relationship
- 11
Document request list tailored to the entity's actual complexity, not a generic checklist
- 12
Professional clearance handling and opening-balance verification for clients switching auditors
- 13
Second-partner independent review before every opinion is signed
- 14
Next-cycle renewal and Corporate Tax filing calendar set at handover so the following year's audit starts on schedule
- 15
Seven-year-aligned retention of working papers supporting figures used in the Corporate Tax return
Talk to PNPC Global before your next licence renewal or Corporate Tax filing deadline — we plan your UAE statutory audit around the dates that actually matter, so the opinion is ready before you need it.
Jurisdiction
Free zone, mainland & offshore
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