Misstatement Tracker
for Insurance
Accumulate misstatements across insurance contract liabilities under IFRS 17, claims provisions, premium allocation approaches, and risk adjustment calculations. Built for the actuarial estimate complexity of insurance audits.
Materiality thresholds
Enter the materiality levels from your planning documentation. The clearly trivial threshold auto-suggests at 5% of performance materiality.
Misstatements
Export as working paper PDF
Download a formatted ISA 450 evaluation summary. Enter your email to unlock the PDF export. Plus one practical audit insight per week.
No spam. We're auditors, not marketers.
ISA 450.5: The auditor shall accumulate misstatements identified during the audit, other than those that are clearly trivial.
ISA 450.10: The auditor shall communicate on a timely basis all misstatements accumulated during the audit with the appropriate level of management.
ISA 450.11: The auditor shall determine whether uncorrected misstatements are material, individually or in aggregate.
Need production-ready working papers?
ISAE 3402 Workbook
€2497 tabs, 95 judgment prompts. Saves 15–20 hours per engagement.
View workbookISA 240 Fraud Risk Toolkit
€34910 worksheets, 3 Word templates. Saves 10–15 hours per engagement.
View toolkitBuilt by a practicing auditor · 14-day money-back guarantee · Free updates when standards change
ISA 450 misstatement evaluation for Insurance
Insurance company audits under IFRS 17 generate more judgmental misstatements per engagement than virtually any other sector. The measurement of insurance contract liabilities requires estimates for future cash flows, discount rates, risk adjustments, and the contractual service margin. Each of these components involves actuarial models with dozens of assumptions, and each assumption the auditor challenges creates a potential misstatement. ISA 450.5 requires accumulation of all identified misstatements except those that are clearly trivial, but in an insurance context, even "clearly trivial" needs careful calibration. A €100,000 misstatement in a claims provision backed by an actuarial model with a €50M best estimate might be clearly trivial in isolation, but if 30 similar model outputs each carry a €100,000 bias in the same direction, the aggregate is €3M and far from trivial. The tracker accumulates across model components so directional bias becomes visible.
IFRS 17 introduced the contractual service margin (CSM) as a new source of misstatement that did not exist under IFRS 4. The CSM represents unearned profit that the insurer releases to the income statement over the coverage period. Misstatements in the CSM arise from four areas: incorrect initial measurement of expected cash flows at contract inception, errors in the allocation of the CSM to accounting periods, failure to adjust the CSM for changes in fulfilment cash flows that relate to future service, and incorrect treatment of experience adjustments (which should not affect the CSM for non-participating contracts). Each of these produces misstatements that affect both the current period and future periods. ISA 450.A4 requires you to consider the carry-forward effect, which for insurance contracts with coverage periods of five to twenty years can be substantial. Record the full estimated carry-forward for each CSM-related misstatement.
Claims provisions (the liability for incurred claims, or LIC under IFRS 17) have always been the headline risk in insurance audits, and IFRS 17 has not changed that. The auditor typically obtains an independent actuarial estimate and compares it to management's booked reserve. The difference is a judgmental misstatement if it exceeds clearly trivial. But the comparison is not straightforward because actuarial estimates produce probability distributions, not point values. The auditor's actuary might calculate a best estimate of €45M with a range of €41M to €49M, while management has booked €43M. Is the misstatement €2M (the difference between the two best estimates) or zero (because management's figure falls within the auditor's range)? ISA 540.A113 says the misstatement is the difference between management's estimate and the nearest point of the auditor's range only if management's estimate falls outside that range. If management's figure is inside the range, the auditor should still consider whether the positioning indicates bias under ISA 450.A17.
Premium allocation approach (PAA) contracts under IFRS 17.53 are simpler to audit than general measurement model contracts, but they still produce misstatements around eligibility and boundary decisions. IFRS 17.53 allows the PAA only for contracts with a coverage period of one year or less, or where the PAA produces a measurement that does not differ materially from the general measurement model. If management applies the PAA to contracts that do not qualify, the entire measurement of those contracts is misstated. The difference between the PAA measurement and the general model measurement for ineligible contracts is a factual misstatement. Additionally, the onerous contract test under IFRS 17.57 applies to PAA contracts, and failure to identify onerous groups creates a further misstatement equal to the loss component that should have been recognised.