
[2025] 178 taxmann.com 3 (Article) – CA. Dindayal Dhandaria
1. Introduction
On 11th August 2025, the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) issued the Audit Quality Maturity Model (AQMM) Version 2.0. This framework is applicable, inter alia, to practice units where peer-review is to be conducted on or after 1st April 2027, provided such firms undertake statutory audits of:
(a) Entities that have raised funds from the public, banks, or financial institutions exceeding ?50 crores during the period under review, or
(b) Any body corporate, including trusts, covered under the category of Public Interest Entities (PIEs), where peer review is to be conducted on or after 1st April 2027.
This announcement raises two significant questions:
- What is meant by the expression “trusts which are covered under public interest entities (PIEs)”? Notably, the monetary threshold of ?50 crores does not apply to PIEs, as the sentence is separated by the conjunction “or.”
- Will AQMM apply to audits of charitable trusts?
FAQ 1. Whether Charitable Trusts are “PIEs”
The classification of trusts is broadly as follows:
(a) Private Trusts – Beneficiaries are specific individuals. Clearly, these do not fall under PIEs.
(b) Public Trusts – Beneficiaries are the public at large. The issue arises whether such trusts can be regarded as PIEs.
A. Interpretational challenges in identifying PIEs under Indian regulations
The AQMM itself does not define PIEs nor stipulate monetary limits. For guidance, one must turn to the ICAI Code of Ethics (clause R400.14), which defines PIEs to include:
(a) Listed entities; and
(b) An entity for which the audit is required by regulation or legislation to be conducted in compliance with the same independence requirements as apply to audits of listed entities.
The first limb is straightforward. The second, however, has given rise to interpretational challenges in India, particularly for charitable trusts, societies, and Section 8 companies.
(a) Charitable Trusts under the Income Tax Act, 1961 – Section 12A(1)(b) mandates audit if gross receipts exceed the basic exemption limit. However, there are no provisions regarding auditor rotation, partner cooling-off, or prohibition on non-audit services.
(b) Societies under the Societies Registration Act, 1860 – Audit is mandated, but there are no provisions paralleling listed-company independence norms.
(c) Section 8 Companies under the Companies Act, 2013 – Required to undergo audit under section 139(1). Auditor rotation under Rule 5 of the Companies (Audit and Auditors) Rules, 2014 applies only when thresholds (e.g., ?10 crore capital or ?50 crore borrowings) are met. Many Section 8 companies fall outside these limits, and even when applicable, the requirements are not fully identical to listed-entity norms.
Thus, these categories generally do not qualify as PIEs.
B. Entities in trust form that are “PIEs”
Certain entities structured as trusts but regulated by SEBI are subject to auditor independence norms identical to listed entities. These include:
(a) Mutual Funds (MF Trusts) – Governed by SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996. Auditor rotation and restrictions on non-audit services are mandated.
(b) Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) and Infrastructure Investment Trusts (InvITs) – Governed by SEBI regulations, which require auditors to comply with listed-entity independence requirements.
Therefore, Mutual Funds, REITs, and InvITs clearly fall within the ICAI’s definition of PIEs.
FAQ 2. Applicability of AQMM to Charitable Trusts
At present, the wording is vague and capable of different interpretations, which could result in inconsistent application by audit firms and regulatory uncertainty. The wording “audit required by regulation or legislation” can be misunderstood as any statutory audit.
But the critical qualifier—”in compliance with the same independence requirements as apply to audits of listed entities”—excludes most Indian charitable and non-profit audits.
It has following practical implications:
(a) If the literal interpretation is adopted, even firms auditing small charitable trusts (say, with receipts of only a few lakhs) will be subject to AQMM compliance, which appears disproportionate and unintended.
(b) If the purposive interpretation is adopted, only large and systemically important trusts (e.g., those handling hundreds of crores in donations, universities, large hospitals, provident/pension funds) should be considered PIEs, in line with the international concept of “public interest entities.”
2. Conclusion
The ICAI Code of Ethics, by adopting the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants (IESBA) definition of PIE, created unnecessary uncertainty in India.
(a) Charitable trusts, societies, and Section 8 companies: Not PIEs, since their audits are not subject to listed-entity independence requirements.
(b) Mutual Funds, REITs, InvITs: Are PIEs, since SEBI mandates auditor independence equivalent to listed companies.
This roundabout drafting could have been avoided by pinpointed Indian illustrations. Until ICAI issues further guidance, practitioners should interpret PIE status narrowly, confined to SEBI-regulated entities in trust form, and not extend it to charitable or non-profit bodies.
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