Audit in Poland – the most common issues in financial statement audits
11 February 2026
11 February 2026

Audit in Poland (i.e., an audit of financial statements) has one overriding purpose: to increase users’ trust in the financial statements by providing the statutory auditor’s opinion based on reasonable assurance — not absolute certainty. In practice, a financial statement audit often reveals missing disclosures, classification errors, or valuation issues that may need to be corrected before the audit opinion is issued.
From a management perspective, audit findings rarely come from a single bookkeeping mistake. More often, they result from a combination of: low-quality source data, unclear or inconsistently applied accounting policies, limited information flow between departments, and starting the year-end close too late.
In this article, we discuss the most common issues identified during a company audit and explain how to prepare — so you can reduce audit risk, shorten timelines, and avoid last-minute stress on both sides.
The audit scope depends on the size and profile of the company, as well as the reporting framework used (e.g., Polish GAAP under the Polish Accounting Act vs. International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)). In practice, auditors focus on areas where the risk of material misstatement is highest — especially:
The most common bottlenecks are points where accounting depends on data outside the finance function — and that data is not standardised, closed, and reconciled on time.
Even if the numbers in the balance sheet and P&L are correct, the financial statements may still fail to present a true and fair view if required disclosures are missing. Typical issues include:
Practical takeaway: the notes are not “an appendix”—they are an integral part of the financial statements. Plan them with the same discipline as the year-end close.
This is one of the most frequent areas of audit adjustments. Auditors regularly identify:
In many organisations, the core issue is process ownership: investment and maintenance teams may not provide accounting with complete data on asset changes, shutdowns, disposals, or planned upgrades.
This area requires strong process maturity. Adjustments appear when:
Good practice: start impairment and deferred tax work early, and base assumptions on management-approved business plans.
In trading and manufacturing companies, the audit often heavily focuses on inventory. Typical issues include:
The key is aligning processes: warehouse, sales, and finance must operate with shared definitions and deadlines — especially at year-end.
A common risk is “invoice-based” revenue recognition without sufficient analysis of whether recognition criteria are met (including transfer of control, benefits, and risks). The problem grows when:
In practice, a clear revenue recognition policy and mapping transaction types to booking rules significantly reduces audit adjustments.
In many companies, the risk is not only valuation — it’s identification. Auditors challenge cases where:
A simple organisational fix is often overlooked: introduce a formal reporting obligation from treasury/finance-risk owners to the financial reporting team.
The most common issues include:
This is where the audit directly tests the quality of accrual accounting and matching.
Auditors verify whether all liabilities relating to the audited period are recorded — even if documents arrive after the balance sheet date. Issues arise when:
Good practice: periodic balance confirmations and a year-end list of open cost items agreed with operational teams
In companies preparing a cash flow statement, common issues include:
The most predictable audit is one supported by a year-end close plan with timelines and accountable owners for each area (inventory, fixed assets, revenue, provisions, taxes, disclosures).
Auditors don’t need “more files”— they need complete, well-evidenced support, organised in a clear structure. What works well in practice:
An internal review of key risk areas before fieldwork starts reduces last-stage corrections — especially for cut-off, provisions, inventory valuation, disclosures, and cross-statement consistency.
Many corrections come from missing information rather than “wrong accounting.” Implement a simple rule: key business events must be reported to finance within a defined timeline and format (contracts, instruments, disputes, guarantees, investment decisions).
A well-managed financial audit process is one where:
This approach reduces the risk of late-stage surprises, when changes are most disruptive.
If you want to make your audit in Poland more predictable, it’s worth strengthening your year-end close and reporting processes early — with the right support in place. Contact us.
The most common issues identified in audits of financial statements relate to disclosures, asset valuation, revenue recognition, inventory, provisions, and completeness of liabilities. The shared root cause is usually process organisation and data quality, not isolated accounting errors.
If your goal is a smoother audit in Poland, focus on: a clear timetable, accountable owners, a pre-audit risk review, and consistent reporting procedures supported by mature accounting processes.
If you have any further questions or require additional information, please contact your business relationship person or use the enquiry form on the HLB Poland website.
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