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The voice of Scotland’s vibrant voluntary sector

Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

TFN is published by the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations, Caledonian Exchange, 19A Canning Street, Edinburgh EH3 8EG. The Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (SCVO) is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation. Registration number SC003558.

ICAS welcomes Scottish charity audit threshold increase

 

The accountants body described it as a “significant and positive step”.

Accountants in Scotland have welcomed a move which will see the Scottish charity audit threshold increase.

The level will rise to £1million of gross income per year for reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2026, up from the current threshold of £500,000.

The Amendment Regulations making this change were laid before the Scottish Parliament, with the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland (ICAS) and others having long campaigned for a threshold increase.

“This is a significant and positive step for Scottish charities,” said Christine Scott, head of charities and reporting at ICAS.

“Many charities will benefit from this deregulatory measure, which recognises the impact of inflation and reverses years of gradual regulatory creep. It will allow charities benefitting from this increase to re-focus saved resources on other priorities.”

Alongside the increase in the audit threshold, the regulations also raise the threshold for the preparation of consolidated group accounts from income of £500,000 to £1m per year.

“This second deregulatory measure will be an additional bonus for some charity-led groups. Both threshold changes sensibly apply from the same date as the new Charities Statement of Recommended Practice (SORP) 2026,” she added.

ICAS had advocated for an approach that would allow a one-year grace period for charities breaching the audit threshold in a single year, bringing practice for Scottish charities closer to the structure of the company audit threshold, albeit that the company threshold itself is understandably higher given the additional accountability the public expects of charities.

Scott added: “For charities that receive a one-off grant or legacy pushing them temporarily over the audit threshold, the cost and effort of a one-off audit may outweigh the related benefit.”

The Amendment Regulations also provide charities with the ability to apply to OSCR for dispensation from disclosing information in trustees’ annual reports and accounts if disclosure could compromise the safety or security of staff, beneficiaries, or property. These measures arise from the Charities (Regulation and Administration) (Scotland) Act 2023.

“While these are welcome developments, charitable companies must remain mindful that they are still required to disclose all information mandated under UK company law for such entities."

 

Comments

0 0
Dominic
20 days ago

More scope for the naughty people.