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Financial reporting: major changes for business sizes take effect

Significant changes affecting financial reporting have kicked in, meaning many businesses may be re-classified in
terms of their sizes.

The thresholds to determine whether a company is counted as ‘micro, small or medium’ changed on 6 April for the first time in 12 years. The Government announced the changed
in December 2024.

The figures on the potential impact of the changes released by the Government, indicated around 6,000 businesses would go from ‘large’ to ‘medium’ under the changes. Around
113,000 businesses and LLPs will shift from small to micro and about 14,000 would drop from medium to small.

The published legislation memorandum states: ‘The legislation reduces reporting burdens on companies. It does this by:

‘Increasing by approximately 50% the turnover and balance sheet criteria that help determine whether a company is a micro-entity or small, or medium-sized, or large for the
purpose of reporting and audit requirements under the Companies Act 2006, which will see many companies benefit from lighter touch financial and non-financial reporting
requirements.’

The new thresholds officially apply to accounting periods beginning on or after 6 April 2025. So, for example, if your financial year begins on 1 July and ends on 30 June,
the first period you’ll be required to apply the new thresholds will be for the year ending 30 June 2026. So, for your 30 June 2025 accounts, the old thresholds still apply.
Although there’s also a transitional provision that could be applied. Here’s what the thresholds look like for before and since April 2025:

Micro-entity:
Before 6 April 2025: turnover of £632,000 or less
From 6 April 2025: turnover of £1 million or less
Small company:
Before 6 April 2025: turnover of £10.2 million or less
From 6 April 2025: turnover of £15 million or less
Medium-sized company:
Before 6 April 2025: turnover of £36 million or less
From 6 April 2025: turnover of £54 million or less
Large company:
Before 6 April 2025: turnover over £36 million
From 6 April 2025: turnover over £54 million

For some businesses, the change might mean they drop to the lower category, which may mean they are no longer required to undergo a statutory audit. Ultimately the reforms are
meant to help reduce the compliance burden on smaller businesses.