LeaseCrunch Blog
Read about ASC 842 & other lease accounting topics
Read about ASC 842 & other lease accounting topics
Read the original article posted on Accounting Today.
Fall can be a busy time of year. In public accounting, CPA firms reconnect with many clients to prepare for the end of the fiscal year. However, this fall is anything but typical.
Some companies have completely changed their workspace in order to keep employees and customers safe, while others are fully remote to do the same. Additionally, financial results may look different this year—hopefully for the better, but possibly for the worse.
Below are some of the factors CPA firms are considering to manage audit fees in 2020.
With so much economic uncertainty, many clients either benefited from relief programs or utilized contract terms to relieve the pressure of rent payments.
While this helps preserve cash flow, lease concessions and other COVID-related changes require extra work, especially under the new lease standard. It takes time to not only determine whether a lease concession occurred (versus a lease modification), but it also takes time to account for it.
That extra work means spending more hours on an audit and it may be challenging to bill all of these hours to the client. For example:
These factors will affect whether audit fees climb while examining lease concessions.
Don’t forget: the best time to break a spreadsheet is when making a change! If your client is handling lease concessions in spreadsheets, you better estimate a few more hours. Learn how much time you can save with our Time-Saving Calculator.
While many people have transitioned to remote work, some of your clients may have started reopening, or were never able to go fully remote. When it comes time to conduct your audit, will it be onsite or remote?
If you’ll conduct an audit remotely, consider the following factors that may introduce audit inefficiencies:
If the audit will be conducted onsite, you’ll need to take the client’s pandemic safety policies and procedures into consideration. Hopefully, every client is operating in a way that keeps employees, customers, and auditors safe.
Your firm also must decide how it approaches team safety onsite and set those expectations with the client. What are the clients’ health and safety policies as they apply to your onsite audit? What are your firm’s policies?
No one knows what the next normal is for client audits, but efficiency is important now more than ever. With many clients may struggle financially due to recent economic hardships, charging for additional pandemic-related costs brings extra difficulties.
Between this still-new lease standard and a global pandemic, clients just want everything to run smoothly. No one wants any more surprises this year—especially audit fees.
Request a demo of LeaseCrunch today to learn how you can keep audits running smoothly for your clients!
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