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How to Appoint an Auditor in a Company — First Auditor and Auditor in the AGM

How to Appoint an Auditor in a Company — First Auditor and Auditor in the AGM

Table of Contents

Every company registered in India must appoint a statutory auditor to verify and certify its financial statements. The appointment is a legal requirement under Section 139 of the Companies Act, 2013, and failure to comply can lead to penalties and affect your company’s credibility.

This guide explains, in simple terms, how to appoint the first auditor within 30 days of company formation and how to appoint or re-appoint the auditor in the Annual General Meeting (AGM).


1. Why the Appointment of Auditor Is Important

  • It ensures compliance with the Companies Act.

  • Audited financial statements build investor and banker confidence.

  • The auditor certifies filings like AOC-4, MGT-7, and Income-Tax Returns.

  • Non-appointment can invite penalties or lead to ROC action.


Auditor appointment and removal are governed by:


3. Appointment of the First Auditor

3.1 Who Appoints

  • The Board of Directors must appoint the first auditor within 30 days of company formation (date of incorporation).

  • If the Board fails to do so, the members must appoint the auditor in an Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) within 90 days.


3.2 Tenure

The first auditor holds office until the conclusion of the first AGM, after which the AGM-appointed auditor takes over.


3.3 Step-by-Step Process

Step Action Form / Record
Obtain consent letter and eligibility certificate from the proposed auditor (under Section 141). Consent & eligibility certificate
Conduct a Board Meeting within 30 days of incorporation. Board Resolution
Approve the appointment of the first auditor and authorize filing. Board Resolution copy
File Form ADT-1 with ROC within 15 days of appointment. ADT-1
Maintain all records in the Register of Auditors. Register entry

3.4 Documents Required

  • Board Resolution approving appointment

  • Company Incorporation Certificate

  • Auditor’s Membership & Firm Registration details


3.5 Practical Example

If your company was incorporated on 1 June,

  • The Board must appoint the first auditor by 30 June.

  • ADT-1 must be filed by 15 July.

  • The auditor holds office until the first AGM.


4. Appointment of Auditor in the AGM

After the first auditor’s tenure ends, the company must appoint a statutory auditor at its first AGM, who will hold office for a five-year term (till the conclusion of the sixth AGM).


4.1 Who Appoints

  • The shareholders appoint the auditor in the AGM by passing an ordinary resolution.

  • The Board or Audit Committee recommends the name of the auditor.


4.2 Tenure and Rotation

Type of Auditor Maximum Term Rotation
Individual Auditor 5 years May serve one more term (total 10 years)
Audit Firm 5 years May serve two consecutive terms (total 10 years)
Cooling-off 5 years after completion of maximum term

4.3 Step-by-Step Process

Step Action Form / Record
Obtain auditor’s consent and eligibility certificate. Sec 139(1) docs
Include the proposal in the AGM Notice. Notice & Explanatory Statement
Members pass Ordinary Resolution in AGM. AGM Minutes
File ADT-1 within 15 days of AGM date. ADT-1
Update Register of Auditors. Register entry

4.4 Re-Appointment

If the same auditor is re-appointed, the company must again file ADT-1 within 15 days of the AGM.


5. First vs AGM Auditor — Quick Comparison

Basis First Auditor AGM Auditor
Appointed by Board / Members (if Board fails) Shareholders in AGM
Timeline Within 30 days of company formation At each AGM
Tenure Till first AGM 5 years
Form ADT-1 within 15 days ADT-1 within 15 days
Meeting Type Board Meeting / EGM AGM
Applicable Section 139(6) 139(1)

6. Removal or Resignation of Auditor

  • If the auditor resigns, Form ADT-3 must be filed within 30 days.

  • If the auditor is removed before term expiry:

    • Obtain Central Government approval through ADT-2.

    • Get shareholder approval by ordinary resolution.


7. Penalties

Default Penalty / Consequence
Not appointing auditor Fine from ₹25,000 – ₹5 lakh
Delay in ADT-1 filing ₹100 per day (additional fee)
Non-filing of ADT-3 Company & auditor both liable
Appointing disqualified auditor Fine up to ₹5 lakh and prosecution of officers

8. Checklist for Founders

✅ Obtain auditor consent & eligibility certificate early.
✅ Conduct first Board Meeting within 30 days of incorporation.
✅ File ADT-1 within 15 days of appointment.
✅ Schedule AGM by end of September each year.
✅ Keep all records and filings in statutory register.
✅ Verify auditor’s membership and FRN validity.


9. Example Flow

Action Deadline
Incorporation 1 June
First Auditor Appointment (Board) By 30 June
ADT-1 Filing By 15 July
First AGM By 30 September next year
AGM Auditor Appointment AGM date
ADT-1 Filing for AGM Auditor Within 15 days of AGM

10. Common Mistakes

❌ Forgetting to file ADT-1 for first auditor.
✅ Must be filed within 15 days.

❌ Assuming auditor appointment happens automatically.
✅ Board or shareholders must formally appoint.

❌ Ignoring rotation or eligibility.
✅ Check Section 141 conditions before appointment.

❌ Missing AGM or late filing.
✅ Schedule early and document resolutions properly.


11. eAuditor Office Expert Support

At eAuditor Office, we manage auditor appointments and filings end-to-end —

  • Drafting Board & AGM Resolutions

  • Filing ADT-1, ADT-2, ADT-3

  • Coordinating with auditors for digital signatures

  • Maintaining company compliance calendar

FAQ's

The Board of Directors, within 30 days of company formation. If not done, the members must appoint within 90 days in an EGM.
Yes. ADT-1 must be filed with ROC within 15 days of appointment, even for the first auditor.
Till the conclusion of the first AGM.
For a five-year term, till the conclusion of the sixth AGM.
Yes, if eligible under rotation rules. Individuals can serve 10 years; firms can serve two consecutive terms (total 10 years).
Yes. Every company, including OPCs, must appoint an auditor within 30 days of incorporation.
The company and its officers may be fined up to ₹5 lakh under Section 139(7).
The auditor must file ADT-3 within 30 days; the company must appoint a new auditor through a Board or General Meeting resolution.
No. A director, officer, or employee of the company cannot be appointed as an auditor.
We handle auditor appointment, filing of ADT forms, and complete compliance for Private Limited and OPCs — ensuring smooth and penalty-free operations.

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