For a German, Swiss, or Dutch business group expanding operations into Colombia, the first encounter with the figure of the Revisoría Fiscal (Statutory Audit) usually triggers a reasonable question: Is this the same as our statutory audit?
The short answer is no. Understanding the difference can prevent costly mistakes from the very first year of operation.
Revisoría Fiscal is an institution of permanent oversight and comprehensive scope that does not exist as such in the German, Swiss, or Dutch regulatory frameworks. While a standard external audit functions as a "snapshot" of the financial statements at the end of the fiscal year, the Revisoría Fiscal operates as continuous surveillance over all organization operations throughout the year.
The person in charge—an independent Certified Public Accountant authorized to provide "public faith"—does not only evaluate the reasonableness of the financial statements: they ensure the overall legality of the company, oversee compliance with legal and statutory norms, and assume civil, criminal, and administrative liability before the Colombian State for the veracity of their reports.
In practical terms: it is more demanding, more continuous, and more binding than any external audit your group is accustomed to in Europe.
The obligation is determined by two independent criteria. Meeting just one of them makes the appointment mandatory.
By Type of Entity: All Corporations (Sociedades por Acciones - S.A.) and, particularly relevant for foreign investors, all branches of foreign companies are required by law to have a Statutory Auditor (Revisor Fiscal), regardless of their size, income level, or invested capital. This point often surprises European groups that structure their entry into Colombia through a branch, assuming that a small operation can bypass this requirement.
By Capitalization Thresholds (Law 43 of 1990): Commercial companies that, as of December 31, 2025, exceed any of the following thresholds are obligated for the following year:
Note for S.A.S. structures: Simplified Joint Stock Companies (S.A.S.) are only obligated if they exceed the above thresholds or if a special sector law requires it. However, it is common for foreign groups starting under this figure to grow rapidly and cross these thresholds without prior compliance planning.
For a European group with high corporate governance standards, a well-executed Revisoría Fiscal is not a regulatory burden; it is a control tool that can be naturally integrated into reporting processes for the parent company:
Many foreign groups make a costly mistake: entrusting the Revisoría Fiscal to a local firm without experience in international reporting, arguing that it is a "mere formality." The consequences include reports that do not address the parent company's needs, inability to communicate findings in English or German, and a lack of context regarding the differences between Colombian regulations and global frameworks.
The Revisoría Fiscal requires a selection and onboarding process that takes time. If your company is evaluating its compliance structure in Colombia, now is the time to act.
Do you need a Statutory Audit team with English and German reporting capabilities? Speak with our bilingual audit team and evaluate whether your current structure meets the standards required by your parent company.