Title 31 › Subtitle SUBTITLE V— - GENERAL ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION › Chapter CHAPTER 75— - REQUIREMENTS FOR SINGLE AUDITS › § 7502
If a non-Federal entity spends $300,000 or more in federal awards in a fiscal year, it must have an audit for that year. If it spends money from more than one federal program, it must have a full single audit. If it spends money from only one federal program and is not already required to have a financial statement audit, it may choose a program-specific audit. Entities that spend less than $300,000 in federal awards in a year are exempt from these audit rules, but they still must keep records and let federal agencies, pass-through entities, or the Comptroller General look at those records. The Director will review the $300,000 threshold every 2 years and may raise it but not lower it below $300,000. Audits must generally be done every year, though some State, local governments, and certain nonprofits may do audits every two years under specified old laws. An independent auditor must follow government auditing standards. A single audit must cover the whole organization or, if chosen, a set of separate audits for parts of the organization. The auditor checks the financial statements, the list of federal spending, internal controls for major programs, and whether the entity followed laws and rules for those programs. Federal agencies and pass-through entities must give program names and rules, review audit results, and follow up on findings. Pass-through entities must also monitor subrecipients and let their auditors access subrecipient records. The auditor must report results as the Director tells them, and the entity must send an electronic reporting package to a federal clearinghouse and make it public within the earlier of 30 days after getting the auditor’s report or certain 13-month/9-month deadlines tied to the audit period. If problems are found, the entity must give a corrective action plan or explain why no action is needed. The Director may run pilot projects after consulting the Chairs and Ranking Minority Members of the Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs and the House Committee on Government Reform and Oversight.
Full Legal Text
Money and Finance — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
31 U.S.C. § 7502
Title 31 — Money and Finance
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73