Section 139(2) of the Companies Act 2013 prescribes 5-year + 5-year terms with a 5-year cooling-off before re-appointment. This tracker tells you where the engagement stands.
Section 139(2) requires listed companies and prescribed unlisted companies to rotate their statutory audit firm after a maximum of two consecutive 5-year terms. After rotation, the outgoing firm cannot be re-appointed for at least 5 years. Network firms (firms under common control or sharing partners) are aggregated for this purpose — re-appointing a different firm in the same network does not reset the clock.
Thresholds for unlisted companies (Rule 5): public companies with paid-up capital ≥ ₹10 cr; private private limited companies with paid-up capital ≥ ₹20 cr; companies with public borrowings / deposits ≥ ₹50 cr.
Section 139(2) of the Companies Act 2013 mandates rotation of statutory auditors for certain classes of companies. An individual auditor cannot be appointed for more than one term of five consecutive years. An audit firm cannot be appointed for more than two terms of five consecutive years (10 years total). After the maximum term, the auditor is ineligible for reappointment in the same company for five years.
Rule 5 of Companies (Audit and Auditors) Rules 2014 specifies the classes of companies subject to rotation: all listed companies, all unlisted public companies with paid-up share capital of ₹10 crore or more, all private limited companies with paid-up share capital of ₹20 crore or more, and all companies (other than listed, one-person and small companies) with public borrowings (from banks / financial institutions / public deposits) of ₹50 crore or more.
The cooling-off period applies to the firm AND to any other firm having a "common partner" with the outgoing firm. This is the network-firm aggregation rule — designed to prevent the auditor from rotating through related firms. Audit committees and boards need to verify common-partner test before reappointment of any related firm.
A listed company has had Firm A as its auditor for ten consecutive years (two terms of five years each). The company wishes to appoint a new auditor. A senior partner of Firm A is also a partner in Firm B.