Reliability
Auditors should always try, where possible, to obtain audit evidence from the most trustworthy and dependable source possible. Audit evidence is generally considered to be more reliable when it is:
- obtained from an independent and external source
- generated internally by the client, but is subject to an effective system of internal control
- obtained directly from the auditor
- provided in documentary form, rather than orally
- an original document (not a photocopy or a scanned document).
The more reliable the audit evidence, the less of it the auditor will need. Keep in mind that if the audit evidence is unreliable, it will never be appropriate, no matter how much of it the auditor gathers.
Relevance
To be relevant, audit evidence must address the objective or purpose of an audit procedure.
For example, when attending the client’s year-end inventory (stock) count, tests will be performed in a two-way direction:
- selecting items from the count sheets to the physical stock confirms the existence of the stock count at the count date
- selecting items from the physical stock to the count sheets confirms the completeness of the stock at the count date.
While the procedures look similar in nature, their purpose (and hence their relevance) is to test different assertions (existence and completeness) concerning the year-end stock valuation.
Conclusion
There is no ‘hard and fast’ rule which states that the auditor has obtained sufficient appropriate audit evidence and this will, of course, be down to professional judgement to conclude upon. However, there are important factors that need to be borne in mind when gathering audit evidence to ensure the requirements of ISA (UK) 500 are met.
Steve Collings FCCA
Steve is the author of an important new title from Bloomsbury Professional – An Auditor’s Guide to Auditing Financial Statements in the UK.
ACCA members can buy a copy of Steve's book, An Auditor’s Guide to Auditing Financial Statements in the UK, with a 20% discount off the cover price using the discount code BPACCA20.
This code will be valid until the end of August 2024.