Where Claude’s long-context window and careful drafting fit into a statutory audit. What it’s genuinely good at, where it falls short, and the prompts that play to its strengths.
Claude is a large language model built by Anthropic. From an auditor’s practical standpoint, three things differentiate it from the rest of the consumer LLM pack: a very large context window (up to a million tokens on the latest Opus tier), a drafting voice that skews formal and structured, and a refusal pattern that errs towards caution on grey-area requests.
The context window matters because most audit reference material — Standards on Auditing, Ind AS, CARO 2020, the Companies Act 2013 — is long. Claude can hold an entire SA in working memory, cross- reference it against a fact pattern, and produce a structured response without the “wait, what did paragraph 17 say?” problem that smaller-context models have. For drafting, it tends to produce file-grade prose on the first pass.
Paste the full text of SA 540 (Auditing Accounting Estimates) and ask Claude to walk you through how the new requirements differ from the old SA 540 — it handles the entire 60-page standard in one go. Same for Ind AS 115 (Revenue), Ind AS 116 (Leases), or the full CARO 2020 order with all 21 clauses. This is the single biggest workflow shift it enables.
Engagement letters, MRLs, communications under SA 260, the basis-for-opinion paragraphs in a modified audit report — Claude produces clean drafts that tend to need only light editing. The voice is formal without being pompous, which is hard to get right.
Drop in a board resolution, a related-party policy, and a sample transaction — ask Claude whether the transaction was board-approved under Section 188. It will hold all three documents in context, check the policy against the resolution, identify gaps, and explain its reasoning step by step. This is audit work that used to require an article assistant’s full afternoon.
State your audit conclusion, then ask Claude to argue the opposite. It will produce a counter-argument of comparable rigour, which is exactly what an EQR partner does mentally. Genuinely useful for going- concern conclusions under SA 570 and KAM judgements under SA 701.
Ask for a working-paper-grade table — rows, columns, exact prescribed labels — and Claude tends to format cleanly. Useful for things like the CARO clause-by-clause checklist, the IRAC classification matrix in bank audits, or the Section 13(3) specified-person tracker in trust audits.
Three honest weaknesses for audit-specific work:
A rough fit map. The strongest fits are bolded — the rest are usable but other tools may serve better.
These play to Claude’s structured-reasoning and long-context strengths. More live in the Audit Prompt Library.
I'm going to paste the full text of SA 540 (Revised), and then a generic fact pattern about a manufacturing entity's inventory provisioning. Walk me through: 1. Which paragraphs of SA 540 are directly relevant 2. The specific procedures the standard requires for this kind of estimate 3. What documentation under SA 230 the auditor would need to keep 4. Three additional questions the auditor should put to management [Paste SA 540 text here] [Paste anonymised fact pattern here]
My engagement team has concluded that going concern is appropriate without a material uncertainty disclosure under SA 570 (Revised). The supporting evidence: management's 12-month cash flow forecast assuming the working-capital line is renewed and a key debtor pays within 60 days. Argue the opposite case. What counter-considerations under SA 570.16-18 would suggest a material uncertainty exists? What additional evidence should the EQR partner reasonably ask for? What disclosure would be appropriate if the counter-case prevailed? Be rigorous, not contrarian for its own sake.
Draft the "Basis for Qualified Opinion" paragraph for an Indian auditor's report under SA 705 (Revised). The qualification is: the company has not provided for diminution in the value of a long-term investment in a wholly-owned subsidiary, even though the subsidiary has incurred losses for three consecutive years and its net worth has eroded by 80%. Quantum of the resulting misstatement is material but not pervasive. Use the SA 705 illustrative format. Keep it tight — three short paragraphs. Cite the standard.
Three tiers matter for an Indian audit firm:
Regardless of tier, treat the SA 230 documentation discipline as a constant: if Claude was used to get to a conclusion, that fact and the prompt approach belong in the working paper.
CORAA does not endorse any specific AI tool. This guide describes how Indian CAs use the named product in audit work — what tends to work, what tends not to, and the practical considerations around client data. It is not an integration guide, an affiliate page, or a recommendation. You decide which tool fits your engagement.
Whichever tool you choose, the principles in the Practical Guide still apply: AI assists, the auditor decides. Keep identifiable client data off prompts that go to consumer tiers. Document AI use under SA 230. Verify every citation.
For official AI credentials and CPE-eligible programmes, refer to ICAI’s AI portal — AICA Level 1, AURA, and the AI Innovation Summit. CORAA AI Lab is a free practice environment, not a regulator substitute.