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Eligible companies can prepare simplified financial reports and directors’ reports under reporting exemption Hong Kong small private company rules. This can reduce reporting complexity, but it does not remove every compliance duty.
This is where many directors get confused. Reporting exemption is not the same as audit exemption. Companies Registry guidance says qualified companies can use simplified reporting. But audit of financial statements is still required for all companies except dormant companies under Section 447.
Reporting exemption allows certain private companies and guarantee companies to prepare simplified financial statements and directors’ reports under Part 9 of the Companies Ordinance. Companies Registry explains that qualified private or guarantee companies are exempted from some specific requirements linked to financial statements, directors’ reports, and auditor’s reports.
In simple words, the company may get a lighter reporting framework. It may avoid some disclosures that larger companies must prepare. It may also avoid the business review requirement in the directors’ report.
But directors still need proper accounts, supporting records, approval, audit work where required, and filing discipline.
Section 359 Companies Ordinance reporting exemption sets the main entry point for simplified reporting. A company can fall within the reporting exemption if it qualifies as a small private company, a qualifying group, a small guarantee company, or an eligible private company with the required approval.
The rule is useful for SMEs because it recognises that smaller businesses may not need the same reporting load as large companies. A family-owned trading company, a consulting firm, or a small holding company may not need full listed-company style reporting.
Still, the exemption has conditions. Directors should not assume the company qualifies only because it is privately owned or has low profit.
Small private company Hong Kong thresholds are based on size, not only revenue. A small private company or a holding company of a group of small private companies must meet two out of three conditions in a financial year. Companies Registry lists the limits as total revenue not exceeding HK$100 million, total assets not exceeding HK$100 million, and employees not exceeding 100.
Here is a simple view.
| Company Type | Main Conditions | Approval Needed | Audit Still Required? |
| Small Private Company | Meets two of three limits: revenue not above HK$100 million, assets not above HK$100 million, employees not above 100 | No special 75% approval if size test is met | Yes, unless dormant |
| Other Private Company Not In A Group | Members agree in writing | Unanimous written agreement | Yes, unless dormant |
| Eligible Private Company | Meets higher size criteria | 75% voting rights approval and no objection | Yes, unless dormant |
| Small Guarantee Company | Revenue not above HK$25 million | Based on statutory criteria | Yes, unless dormant |
| Mixed Group | Group meets prescribed criteria | 75% approval if relevant | Yes, unless dormant |
SME-FRF SME-FRS Hong Kong reporting is linked to companies that qualify for simplified reporting. Companies Registry guidance says financial statements may be prepared under the Small and Medium-sized Entity Financial Reporting Standard and Financial Reporting Framework issued or specified by HKICPA.
HKICPA also states that it issued SME-FRF and SME-FRS as accounting standards for SMEs that qualify under the SME-FRF.
For directors, this can make financial statements easier to prepare and understand. The company may not need the same level of disclosure as a larger company. This can reduce cost and time, especially when the business has a simple structure.
Eligible private company 75% shareholder approval matters when a company does not meet the normal small private company thresholds but can meet the higher size criteria.
Companies Registry states that an eligible private company or eligible private group can qualify if it meets two of three higher limits:
It also needs 75% approval based on all voting rights, with no member voting against the resolution. This approval should not be handled casually. Companies Registry also explains that the relevant agreement or resolution must be delivered to the Registrar within 15 days after it is made or passed.
Reporting exemption does not mean the company can ignore accounting standards. It does not remove director responsibility. It also does not automatically remove audits.
This point is important. Companies Registry clearly says financial statement audit is required for companies falling within reporting exemption, except dormant companies.
So a company may have simplified accounts, but the auditor still needs proper records. Bank statements, sales records, purchase invoices, payroll files, MPF details, loan records, and tax schedules should be ready.
One practical benefit is business review relief. Companies Registry FAQ says companies that fall within reporting exemption are not required to prepare a business review. The same FAQ also lists wholly owned subsidiaries and certain private companies with a special resolution as other cases where a business review may not be needed.
For many SMEs, this matters because a business review can require broader commentary on business development, performance, position, and key risks. A smaller company may prefer a simpler directors’ report if it qualifies.
Directors often mix up the terms “small company,” “dormant company,” “reporting exemption,” and “audit exemption.” These are not the same.
Common mistakes include:
Companies Registry notes that the group size must satisfy the criteria as a whole. A company cannot use SME-FRS exclusions to decide reporting exemption eligibility.
Directors should review reporting exemption eligibility every year before financial statements are prepared. The company should check revenue, total assets, employee count, group status, shareholder approval, and any industry exclusion.
The review should happen early because the accounting framework affects how records are prepared. If the company grows beyond the limits, adds subsidiaries, or changes ownership, the reporting position may change.
Reporting exemption Hong Kong small private company rules can reduce reporting complexity, but they still need careful review. The exemption can help eligible SMEs use simplified financial reporting, but it does not remove audit duties for active companies.
Arnifi’s expert team helps companies build the setup so directors can reduce reporting errors and keep Hong Kong compliance cleaner for long-term growth.
Reporting exemption allows eligible companies to prepare simplified financial statements and directors’ reports under the Companies Ordinance. It applies only when the company meets the relevant statutory criteria.
No. Companies Registry states that financial statement audit is still required for companies falling within reporting exemption, except dormant companies under Section 447.
A small private company generally needs to meet two of three limits: revenue not above HK$100 million, assets not above HK$100 million, and employees not above 100.
It is needed for eligible private companies or eligible private groups using the higher size criteria. The approval must represent at least 75% of all voting rights, with no member voting against the resolution.
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