Preparing for 2026 Busy Season:
Key PCAOB Findings to Keep in Mind
Insights & Analysis
Background: The PCAOB’s 2025 and 2024 inspection cycles reveal consistent finding patterns across triennially inspected firms. With firms getting ready for busy season, this analysis synthesizes those findings into actionable themes to help audit teams identify areas of focus and proactively address deficiencies before they become inspection findings.
Definitions
Triennially Inspected Firms: Firms inspected by the PCAOB once every three years that annually issue fewer than 100 audit reports.
Part 1.A Findings: Deficiencies where the PCAOB concluded the firm had not obtained sufficient appropriate audit evidence to support its opinion(s) on the issuer’s financial statements and/or internal controls over financial reporting (ICFR).
Part 1.B Findings: Deficiencies where the PCAOB concluded there were instances of non-compliance with PCAOB standards or rules other than those where the firm had not obtained sufficient appropriate audit evidence to support its opinion(s).
Key Takeaways
Part 1.A Deficiencies
- Revenue remains the #1 deficiency area, particularly evaluating performance obligations before revenue recognition, determining and allocating transaction price, testing accuracy/completeness of reports, and not identifying required disclosures
- ICFR continues to be a challenging area, particularly evaluating control owner’s review procedures (including follow-up & resolution) and testing accuracy/completeness of data used in the control
- Use of Specialists continues to be problematic—firms are not adequately evaluating their work, assumptions, and source data used to conclude on the reasonableness or appropriateness of the estimate
- Estimates remains a challenge, especially when evaluating whether companies had a reasonable basis for significant assumptions used in the determination of the estimate
- Journal entry testing shows systematic failures—some firms completely omit testing, while others use haphazard selection methods or fail to examine underlying support
Note: Data reliability issues permeate the top deficiencies—across revenue, ICFR, specialists, and estimates, firms consistently fail to test the accuracy and completeness of data/reports
Part 1.B Deficiencies
- These deficiencies—primarily related to audit committee communications, critical audit matters (CAMs), and Form AP accuracy—have resulted in significant PCAOB fines but are largely preventable
Recommended Actions
- Pre-issuance reviews – Perform (or engage external party to perform) reviews focusing on higher-risk areas, including areas subject to frequent PCAOB findings outlined in this insight
- Targeted training – Facilitate training and coaching on the testing of revenue, evaluating specialist procedures, and testing journal entries; consider designating a revenue subject matter expert within the firm
- Data testing – Identify data/reports used in controls, substantive procedures, and specialists’ work; perform risk assessment; and design tailored procedures to test the accuracy/completeness of data
- Estimates testing – Identify critical accounting estimates and focus on evaluating basis for significant assumptions and testing accuracy/completeness of data; consider designating an estimates subject matter expert within the firm
- Standardized tools – Implement templates and checklists to prevent common Part 1.B findings such as audit committee communications, CAMs, and Form AP
Detailed Findings
Part 1.A: Insufficient Audit Evidence
Part 1.A deficiency rate (percentage of triennially inspected firms with at least one Part 1.A finding) was 48% in 2024 and 33% in preliminary 2025 results.
| Rank | Theme (and Standard/Rule) | Summary of Findings |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Revenue (AS 2301, AS 2310, AS 1105, AS 2401, AS 2305, AS 2810) |
Revenue Recognition (ASC 606)
Data
Other
|
| 2 | ICFR Testing (AS 2201) |
|
| 3 | Specialists (AS 1210) |
|
| 4 | Accounting Estimates (AS 2301, AS 2501, AS 2810, AS 2315, AS 1105) |
Assumptions
Limited Procedures
|
| 5 | Journal Entries & Fraud Risk (AS 2401) |
Selection
Testing
|
Part 1.B: Non-Compliance with Standards
| Rank | Theme (and Standard/Rule) | Summary of Findings |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Communications with Audit Committees (AS 1301) |
Not communicating the following: significant risks, critical accounting policies/practices and estimates, other accounting firms participating in the audit, uncorrected misstatements, overview of audit strategy, related party evaluation, results of the audit prior to report issuance, going concern evaluation, quality of financial reporting. |
| 2 | Critical Audit Matters (CAM) Determination & Audit Report Issues (AS 3101, AS 3105) |
Not including material matters in CAM determination procedures, CAM communication language inconsistent with audit documentation, not performing any CAM procedures, incorrect year firm began serving as auditor, audit report not addressed to board of directors, missing required information about predecessor auditor, incorrect reporting on dual-dated audit reports, missing engagement partner name disclosure, going concern explanatory paragraph in wrong location. |
| 3 | Form AP Filing & Accuracy (PCAOB Rule 3211) |
Not filing Form AP by deadline, inaccurate issuer CIK number, inaccurate audit report date, omitted other accounting firm participation, inaccurate engagement partner name/Partner ID, inaccurate office issuing audit report, missing dual-date information, inaccurate audit hours calculations, and omitted previously used Partner ID. |