DREDGECAP

Auditor Changes — Public Companies That Switched Audit Firms

Auditor switches detected from the dei:AuditorName and dei:AuditorFirmId XBRL tags in SEC 10-K filings. 2,146 transitions across 1,759 distinct issuers (451 downgrades, 432 upgrades, 1,258 lateral). Severity is computed from the tier comparison between the old and new audit firm (lib/auditor-tier-map.ts). Each row links to the SEC EDGAR filing index where the new auditor was first tagged.

Severity:All2,146High451Medium437Low1,258Direction:All2,146Downgrade451Lateral1,258Upgrade432

Most Common Audit-Firm Switches

Moss Adams LLPBaker Tilly US, LLP(37 companies)
Ernst & Young LLPDeloitte & Touche LLP(29 companies)
Marcum LLPCBIZ CPAs P.C.(25 companies)
Ernst & Young LLPKPMG LLP(22 companies)
Friedman LLPMarcum LLP(21 companies)
Ernst & Young LLPPricewaterhouseCoopers LLP(21 companies)
KPMG LLPPricewaterhouseCoopers LLP(14 companies)
KPMG LLPDeloitte & Touche LLP(13 companies)
Dixon Hughes Goodman LLPFORVIS, LLP(13 companies)
KPMG LLPErnst & Young LLP(12 companies)

Filtered transitions (0 of 2,146)

No auditor-change events match the current filter. The Track D auditor_change extractor populates this table from the per-filing inline-XBRL ingestion; refresh runs daily at 05:45 UTC.

Why Auditor Changes Matter

The independent auditor is the third party that signs off on a public company's financial statements. A change in audit firm — especially an unexpected one, mid-fiscal-year, or to a materially smaller firm — is one of the highest-conviction red flags in fundamental analysis. The historical pattern matters because forensic episodes (Enron and Andersen, Wirecard and EY, Luckin Coffee and EY-HK) have repeatedly featured auditor dismissals or resignations in the run-up to discovery.

Not every change is a red flag. Routine reasons include the existing auditor declining reappointment because of fee-pressure or independence concerns, the audit committee rotating firms for governance reasons after a long tenure, or the company moving from a Big Four firm to a regional firm to reduce cost as it scales down. The signal to investigate is not the change itself but the context— timing, direction, and disclosure completeness in the company's 8-K Item 4.01 filing (the dedicated disclosure form for an auditor change).

Detection method: each issuer's 10-K filings are parsed for the dei:AuditorName and dei:AuditorFirmId XBRL concepts and grouped by fiscal year. A transition is flagged when the PCAOB Firm ID differs across consecutive fiscal years (or, as a fallback when the firm ID is not tagged, when the canonicalized auditor name differs by strict equality). The first-ever covered period for an issuer never produces a flag — there is no prior period to compare. Severity is computed from the tier comparison between old and new firm: a Big-4 → small-regional transition is high, a same-tier move (Big-4 → Big-4) is low, and a smaller-firm → larger-firm move is medium.

Disclosure: Auditor identity is extracted from the inline-XBRL dei:Auditor*tags on each issuer's 10-K filings (PCAOB-tagged, mandatory in 2022+ filings). Transition detection compares consecutive fiscal years per CIK. Pre-2022 filings predate the SEC's auditor-tagging rule and may not surface here. Data refreshes daily at 05:45 UTC. This page is not legal or investment advice.