What is NFRA and what does it do?+
The National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA) is the Government of India authority constituted under Section 132 of the Companies Act 2013. NFRA recommends accounting and auditing standards, monitors and enforces compliance, and oversees the quality of service of professions associated with statutory audit. It has both inspection (Audit Quality Inspection Programme) and disciplinary (under Section 132(4)) jurisdiction over auditors of certain Public Interest Entities (PIEs).
Which audits fall under NFRA jurisdiction?+
Under NFRA Rules 2018 Rule 3: (a) all listed companies; (b) unlisted public companies with paid-up share capital ≥ ₹500 crore OR turnover ≥ ₹1,000 crore OR loans / debentures / deposits outstanding ≥ ₹500 crore as on 31 March of preceding FY; (c) insurance / banking / electricity-generating companies of specified size; (d) any body corporate or person referred to NFRA by the Central Government in public interest.
How does NFRA action differ from ICAI disciplinary action?+
ICAI Disciplinary Committee can hold professional misconduct proceedings against members under the CA Act 1949 — removal of name from Register, fine, reprimand. NFRA has parallel jurisdiction over audits of NFRA-covered entities, with stronger remedies including monetary penalties up to 10 times the fees received and debarment for up to 10 years from being appointed as an auditor or internal auditor.
What is the largest NFRA penalty so far?+
On 19 August 2024, NFRA imposed ₹10 crore on M/s BSR & Associates LLP (KPMG-affiliated) in the Coffee Day Enterprises matter — the largest firm-level penalty NFRA has issued. The same order debarred the engagement partner for 10 years and the EQCR partner for 5 years.
What are the most common audit failures NFRA cites?+
Across the verified orders, the top recurring failure themes are: SA 240 (fraud — failure to investigate or respond to fraud risk indicators); SA 550 (related parties — loans / advances disguised as RPTs not tested); SA 230 (documentation — missing or inadequate working papers); SA 200 (professional skepticism — failure to challenge management assertions); and Section 143(12) (delayed or missing ADT-4 fraud reporting).
Has NFRA action slowed in 2025?+
Yes. In February 2025 the Delhi High Court ruled against NFRA on procedural grounds — specifically the separation of functions between investigation and disciplinary outcomes (Engagement Quality Control Review jurisdiction). In March 2025 the Supreme Court partly restored NFRA's authority but stayed final orders pending the larger review. As a result, only one disciplinary order has been issued in 2025 (Religare Finvest — January 2025).
Does NFRA inspect all PIE audits?+
No. NFRA's Audit Quality Inspection Programme launched in December 2022 and has concentrated on the Big 6 / network firms (Deloitte HSL, BSR & Co LLP / KPMG affiliate, SRBC & Co LLP / EY affiliate, Walker Chandiok / Grant Thornton, Price Waterhouse / PwC, S.R. Batliboi). The 2024 cycle covered 10 firms and 42 audit engagements with five inspection teams. From September 2025 NFRA expanded outreach to small / mid-tier firms via city-based programmes (Hyderabad, Indore) and the Audit Firms Survey 2025.
What can an auditor learn from NFRA orders?+
Five practical takeaways: (1) document the audit response to fraud risk indicators — SA 240 documentation gaps are the #1 finding; (2) test related-party transactions independently — do not accept management assertions on arm's-length pricing; (3) maintain audit working papers contemporaneously per SA 230 — NFRA reviews the file the auditor produces; (4) react to predecessor-auditor red flags — multiple orders cite ignoring a resigning auditor's reported fraud; (5) report suspected fraud under Section 143(12) within timelines — delay alone has triggered penalties.