The threshold above which missing or incorrect information in financial statements could influence the economic decisions of users relying on those statements.
Materiality is both a quantitative and qualitative concept in accounting and auditing. Quantitatively, it's often set as a percentage of a benchmark: 0.5–1% of revenue, 5–10% of profit before tax, or 1–2% of total assets. Qualitatively, even small amounts can be material if they: change a profit to a loss, affect compliance with covenants, involve fraud or illegal activities, or affect executive compensation. Auditors set materiality thresholds at the planning stage to determine the scope of testing. Under SA 320 (Indian auditing standard), auditors must determine materiality for the financial statements as a whole and performance materiality (lower threshold for individual items). Materiality is a judgment call — there's no fixed rule.
Company with ₹100 crore revenue and ₹5 crore PBT. Auditor sets overall materiality at 5% of PBT = ₹25,00,000. Performance materiality at 75% = ₹18,75,000. An error of ₹30,00,000 in revenue classification is material and must be corrected. An error of ₹50,000 in office supplies is immaterial and can be ignored.
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They select a benchmark (revenue, PBT, total assets, equity) appropriate for the entity, apply a percentage (guided by professional judgment and firm methodology), consider qualitative factors, and set performance materiality lower to catch cumulative errors. It's revised throughout the audit as new information emerges.
Yes. A ₹10,000 payment to a director's relative is quantitatively tiny for a large company but qualitatively material as a related-party transaction requiring disclosure. Similarly, even small regulatory violations, frauds, or covenant breaches are always material regardless of amount.
An independent evaluation conducted within a company to assess and improve the effectiveness of risk management, internal controls, and governance processes.
Formal records of a business's financial activities, comprising the Balance Sheet, Profit & Loss Statement, Cash Flow Statement, and Notes to Accounts.
An accounting principle that requires expenses to be recorded in the same period as the revenues they help generate, ensuring accurate profit measurement.
A fundamental accounting assumption that a business will continue operating indefinitely and has no intention or need to liquidate or significantly scale down operations.
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