India’s audit regulator, the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA) is sharpening its enforcement and signalling a clear shift towards stricter accountability, with powers to debar audit firms for up to 10 years and impose penalties reaching ₹5 crore.
The development highlights the growing role of the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA), which was constituted in October 2018 under Section 132 of the Companies Act, 2013 as an independent regulator reporting directly to the Ministry of Corporate Affairs.
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Wider Jurisdiction, Active Enforcement
NFRA’s jurisdiction extends to auditors of listed companies and large unlisted public companies, placing a significant segment of audit firms directly under its oversight.
Recent actions indicate a more aggressive enforcement approach. The regulator has issued notices to auditors of IndusInd Bank for past audits and is probing Gensol Engineering, signalling that scrutiny is not merely prospective but also retrospective.
Standards Tightened Across the Board
Alongside enforcement, NFRA is raising the technical benchmark for auditing.
It has recommended 40 revised Standards on Auditing, including those relating to group audits and quality management. Additionally, 47 amendments to Indian Accounting Standards (Ind AS) have been proposed, of which 44 have already been notified.
This reflects a broader push to elevate audit quality and align practices with evolving global expectations.
Shift from Formal Compliance to Substantive Accountability
A key change lies in the regulator’s expectations from auditors. NFRA now requires firms to demonstrate not only that audit procedures were carried out, but also that they were performed with proper reasoning, contemporaneous documentation, and professional judgment.
The emphasis is on visible professional scepticism in audit files, rather than implicit reliance on internal judgment.
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Focus on Smaller Firms
NFRA’s outreach is no longer limited to large audit networks.
Audit Practice Toolkits released in November 2025 specifically target small and medium practitioners, complemented by nationwide workshops under the programme “Creating a Better Financial Reporting World.”
This indicates an effort to standardise audit quality across the profession, beyond the Big Four firms.
Documentation Culture Becomes Central
The regulator is clearly moving towards a documentation-driven and accountability-focused audit environment. Firms are expected to maintain robust records evidencing audit decisions, rationale, and execution.
The direction suggests that firms which adapt early to these expectations will be better positioned in dealing with regulators, clients, and investors.
Conclusion
NFRA’s evolving approach marks a structural shift in India’s audit landscape—from compliance-based functioning to a regime centred on demonstrable accountability and quality.
With enforcement actions, revised standards, and targeted outreach already underway, audit firms may need to reassess their practices, documentation standards, and risk frameworks to remain compliant in this increasingly stringent regulatory environment.

