Financial statements: Filing requirements & exemptions
Check if your company needs to file financial statements and what to file based on your company type and size.
On this page
Who must prepare and file
All Singapore-incorporated companies must:
Prepare financial statements, except dormant relevant companies
File financial statements with ACRA, unless exempted
Note: All financial statements that you file as part of your annual return will be available for public purchase.
Who does not need to file
You do not need to file financial statements if you meet these criteria.
Dormant relevant company
You do not need to prepare and file financial statements if your company meets all of the requirements under section 201A of the Companies Act.
Examples of requirements
Requirements | Details |
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Your company meets the substantial assets test | You need to meet either criterion to pass the substantial assets test:
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Your company has been dormant from either:
| A company is considered dormant when it has no significant accounting transactions during the financial year. An accounting transaction is one that affects the financial statements of a company. |
Your company is not a:
| - |
Solvent exempt private company (EPC)
You do not need to file financial statements if you meet both of the conditions below. However, you can choose to file financial statements voluntarily.
Conditions: Solvent EPC
Conditions | Details |
|---|---|
EPC requirements | You need to meet either requirement:
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Solvency assessment | You are solvent where you can meet your debts as and when they are due. Note: You need to make an online declaration of solvency when you file your annual return. |
Filing requirements for companies
The type and extent of filing depend on your company's nature and the size of its operations.
At a glance
Company type | What you need to file |
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Company type definitions
Check if your company meets the definitions for each company type:
Smaller and non-publicly accountable companies
Check the definitions for smaller and non-publicly accountable companies.
Definitions
What you need to know | Details |
|---|---|
What is a smaller company | A smaller company is one where both conditions are met:
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Smaller company: How to assess revenue and total assets | Base your assessment on the financial statements you need to prepare under the Companies Act. If your company has subsidiary, associate or joint venture, use consolidated figures. This applies unless your company is exempt from preparing consolidated financial statements under the accounting standards or by ACRA. Apply the $500,000 threshold regardless of your financial year length For financial statements in foreign currency: Translate revenue using average rates over the financial year and total assets using the closing rate at financial year-end. |
What is a non-publicly accountable company | Your company is non-publicly accountable if it is:
Check the criteria for non-publicly accountable companies below for more information. |
You must meet these criteria to qualify as a non-publicly accountable company.
Criteria: Non-publicly accountable company
Type of company | Criteria |
|---|---|
Listed company | You must not be any of these:
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Banking and payment system entity | You must not be any of these:
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Insurance entity | You must not be any of these:
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Capital market infrastructure provider | You must not be any of these:
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Capital markets intermediary | You must not be any of these:
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Other regulated entities | You must not be any of these:
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Banks, finance and insurance companies
To qualify in this category, your company needs to meet both of these criteria:
In the banking, finance or insurance business
Regulated by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS)
Companies using other accounting standards
Your company has ACRA's approval to prepare financial statements using accounting standards other than the prescribed ASC accounting standards.
This definition does not include: Companies using International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) that state simultaneous compliance with the Singapore Financial Reporting Standards (International) (SFRS(I)).
Foreign company with Singapore branches
You only need to file a PDF copy of your financial statements authorised by directors.
More details: Annual filing for foreign companies
Types of XBRL templates
XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language) is a digital format that captures financial data in a structured way.
Required XBRL templates
Template | What it captures |
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Full XBRL template |
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Simplified XBRL template |
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XBRL FSH (banks) template |
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XBRL FSH (insurance) template |
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Technical guides and resources
XBRL filing requirements (from 1 May 2021)
File name | Last updated |
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Lists all taxonomy elements and their references within ACRA Taxonomy 2022. | October 2022 |
A sample XBRL file which contains a company’s full set of financial statements in XBRL format in ACRA Taxonomy 2022. | October 2022 |
October 2022 | |
October 2022 | |
May 2020 |
