Definition

is a signed representation by an auditor as to the reliability and fairness of a set of financial statements. It is usually presented at the beginning of an audit report.

Use cases, Example & Why it matters

Use cases

- Used in audit planning to understand risks and design procedures.
- Used during testing (controls/substantive) and documentation of audit evidence and conclusions.

Example

- Example: The auditor references **Audit Opinion Letter** when designing procedures and documenting conclusions in the audit file.

Why it matters

- Why it matters: Supports high-quality, defensible audit conclusions and helps detect material misstatements and control weaknesses.

Related terms

← Back to Dictionary