Statutory Audit
For companies that are legally required to have their accounts audited — broadly those exceeding two of the three thresholds: turnover above £10.2 million, balance sheet above £5.1 million, or more than 50 employees — we provide a fully compliant statutory audit conducted in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK). Our audit opinion provides the independent assurance your stakeholders require.
Voluntary Audit
Many companies below the statutory threshold choose to have their accounts audited voluntarily — because their bank requires it, their investors expect it, or because the directors want independent assurance on their financial statements. We conduct voluntary audits to exactly the same standard as statutory audits, providing the same level of credibility and assurance.
Charity Audit
Charities with income above £1 million are required by law to have their accounts independently audited. We have extensive experience auditing charities across a range of sizes and sectors — understanding the specific accounting framework, the regulatory environment of the Charity Commission, and the reporting expectations of trustees and funders.
Academy Trust Audit
Academy trusts are required to have their accounts audited annually and submitted to the Education and Skills Funding Agency. We understand the Academies Accounts Direction, the specific requirements of the ESFA, and the governance structures of academy trusts — providing an efficient, well-planned audit that meets all regulatory requirements.
Group Audit
For businesses operating through a group structure — a holding company with one or more trading subsidiaries — we provide consolidated group audits, coordinating audit work across multiple entities and providing an opinion on the consolidated financial statements.
Assurance & Independent Review
Where a full audit is not required but some level of independent scrutiny is needed — for a lender, an investor, or internal governance purposes — we provide assurance engagements and independent reviews that deliver meaningful comfort at proportionate cost.
Audit Planning & Risk Assessment
Every audit begins with a detailed planning phase — understanding your business, identifying the significant risks of material misstatement, agreeing the audit timetable, and communicating clearly to your team exactly what information we will need and in what format. Good planning is the single biggest driver of audit efficiency.
Interim Audit Work
Where the timetable allows, we carry out a proportion of the audit work — particularly systems and controls testing — before the year-end. This spreads the workload, reduces the pressure at year-end, and allows us to identify any issues with time to address them before the accounts are finalised.
Year-End Fieldwork
The substantive phase of the audit — testing the significant balances and transactions in your financial statements, verifying assets and liabilities, confirming the cut-off of income and expenditure, and reviewing the appropriateness of accounting policies and estimates. Conducted at your premises or remotely depending on your preference and the nature of the work.
Audit Completion & Reporting
Once fieldwork is complete, we finalise our conclusions, clear any outstanding queries, and prepare the audit report. We also prepare a management letter — setting out any significant findings, control weaknesses, or recommendations arising from the audit — which is delivered to management and the board alongside the signed accounts.
Post-Audit Review Meeting
A structured meeting with the directors or audit committee to discuss the findings of the audit, explain any significant judgements made in the accounts, answer questions, and agree management's response to any recommendations. The audit should generate a useful conversation — not just a signed document.
Ongoing Audit Support
Between audits, we remain available to advise on accounting treatments, respond to queries from your finance team, and flag any changes in accounting standards or regulatory requirements that may affect your next set of accounts. The audit relationship works best as a year-round engagement, not an annual visit.