Regulation A Audit and Compliance Advisory
Audits Prepared for Public Scrutiny, Investor Confidence, and Smooth Qualification
Wahl Street Accountancy Corporation provides audit and compliance support for companies pursuing Regulation A, helping prepare audits, disclosures, and financials that hold up under review and keep capital raises moving.
Built for Review. Ready for Capital.
Regulation A can open access to a wider investor base without the weight of a full IPO, but it comes with real regulatory scrutiny, where financial reporting, audit and compliance standards, and disclosures are closely examined.
For companies pursuing a Regulation A offering, the audit is not a box to check; it is the backbone of SEC qualification and investor credibility.
Wahl Street Accountancy Corporation works with issuers, founders, and deal teams to deliver disciplined audit and compliance solutions tailored to Regulation A. Our focus is true readiness, helping financials, systems, and processes stand up to SEC review without unnecessary delays.
What a Regulation A Audit Requires
A Regulation A audit is fundamentally different from a routine financial statement engagement. It is designed to confirm that a company’s financial reporting is reliable, consistent, and aligned with the disclosures in the offering circular.
At a baseline, Regulation A requires audited financial statements prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP. These audits must be conducted by an independent PCAOB-registered firm and included in the Form 1-A filing submitted to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Audit and compliance work for Regulation A typically involves:
Historical financial statements covering the required periods
Evaluation of revenue recognition policies and consistency
Balance sheet integrity, including equity, debt, and related-party items
Clear documentation of capitalization and ownership structure
Alignment between audited numbers and offering disclosures
For many growth-stage companies, the real challenge is readiness. While financial records may exist, controls, documentation, and accounting judgments often need disciplined preparation before SEC review.
Wahl Street Accountancy Corporation works with management teams to bridge that gap through structured audit and compliance solutions.
Tier 1 vs. Tier 2 Audit
Regulation A offerings are structured under two tiers, each with different capital limits, reporting obligations, and audit and compliance expectations. Our role is to help companies understand these differences and prepare audit-ready financials that align with SEC requirements from the outset.
Tier 1 Offerings
Tier 1 offerings allow companies to raise up to $20 million in a 12-month period with lighter ongoing reporting after SEC qualification. Audited financial statements are required, but post-qualification compliance and audits obligations are limited.
Audit Scope
- Historical financial statements under U.S. GAAP
- Revenue, expense, and balance sheet accuracy
- Capitalization structure and material transactions
- Alignment with Form 1-A disclosures
Tier 2 Offerings
Tier 2 offerings allow raises of up to $75 million and involve higher regulatory and investor scrutiny. In addition to audited financials, issuers must meet ongoing annual and semiannual reporting requirements.
Audit Scope
- Accounting consistency and reporting discipline
- Internal controls and documentation quality
- Equity, capitalization, and financing activity
- Key estimates, judgments, and assumptions
- Disclosure alignment with securities counsel
How We Prepare Companies for SEC Qualification
SEC qualification delays are rarely caused by a single issue. They result from misalignment between accounting, disclosures, and operational reality. As one of the regulatory compliance consulting firms experienced in capital markets transactions, our approach is designed to eliminate that friction before it becomes visible to regulators.
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Are Your Financials Ready to Withstand SEC Review?
Common Regulation A Audit Pitfalls
Regulation A audits tend to break down in predictable ways. Wahl Street Accountancy Corporation anticipates these issues early and aligns audit and compliance work into a single, disciplined process.
Incomplete or inconsistent historical records
Growth-driven system and accounting changes are often poorly documented, creating gaps that attract SEC scrutiny.
Complex equity and capitalization structures
SAFEs, convertibles, and founder issuances require precise classification and disclosure, with errors frequently leading to extended SEC comments.
Revenue recognition misalignment
Operational revenue practices may not meet U.S. GAAP standards under a public-offering review.
Insufficient documentation of accounting judgments
Unsupported estimates and policy decisions often trigger regulator follow-up questions.
Lack of coordination between advisors
Misalignment between auditors, counsel, and management causes disclosure drift and unnecessary qualification delays.
Areas We Serve
Wahl Street Accountancy Corporation delivers audit and compliance services across the United States and internationally. While our work is not limited by geography, we are most active in markets where Regulation A activity, capital formation, and growth-stage transactions are concentrated.
Our core markets include:
We regularly support companies operating beyond these states, including multi-state and cross-border businesses preparing for Regulation A offerings and other capital markets events. If your company is based elsewhere, we’re happy to discuss how we can support your audit and compliance needs.
Why Companies Choose WSA
Companies pursuing Regulation A and other capital events typically want audit and compliance solutions that reflect the realities of regulatory review and transaction timing. Wahl Street Accountancy Corporation supports these engagements with a steady, experience-driven approach.
200+ going-public transactions, mergers, and acquisitions completed
Registered with the California Board of Accountancy
Cross-border expertise in U.S., Canada, and Asia
$100K to $300M in audited transactions
Strategic affiliation with NorAsia Consulting for financing and international advisory
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is an audit required for Regulation A?
Yes. Regulation A requires audited financial statements prepared under U.S. GAAP by a PCAOB-registered firm and filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. This is a core audit and compliance requirement for both Tier 1 and Tier 2 offerings.
2. How long does a Regulation A audit take?
Timing depends on readiness. Companies with strong audit and compliance foundations may complete audits in weeks, while those needing GAAP normalization or equity cleanup often take longer. Delays typically stem from preparation gaps rather than audit execution.
3. Can Wahl Street work with my securities attorney?
Yes. Effective Regulation A execution requires close coordination between compliance and audits and legal disclosures. Wahl Street works directly with securities counsel to align audit conclusions with Form 1-A disclosures and reduce qualification risk.
4. What delays Regulation A qualification most often?
Delays usually result from inconsistent financials, unsupported accounting judgments, equity misclassification, and disclosure mismatches. Fragmented audit and compliance efforts, rather than regulatory complexity, are the most common cause of extended review cycles.
5. Do Tier 1 and Tier 2 offerings have different audit requirements?
Both tiers require audits, but Tier 2 offerings involve higher scrutiny and ongoing reporting. From an internal audit risk and compliance services perspective, Tier 2 audits must support sustained reporting discipline beyond initial qualification.
6. Should I prepare for ongoing reporting before launching a Tier 2 offering?
Yes. Tier 2 issuers face ongoing reporting obligations. Early audit and compliance planning around controls and documentation aligns with best-practice internal audit risk and compliance services and reduces post-qualification strain.
7. What financial periods are required in a Regulation A audit?
Required periods depend on offering structure and timing but generally include recent fiscal years and applicable interim periods. Proper scoping is a critical audit and compliance step to avoid refiling or additional regulatory comments.
8. How does equity complexity affect a Regulation A audit?
SAFEs, convertibles, warrants, and founder issuances must be correctly classified and disclosed. Equity errors are a leading source of comments. Effective audit and compliance solutions address equity structures early and defensibly.
9. Can a private-company audit be reused for Regulation A?
Usually not. Private-company audits often lack offering-level disclosures. Experienced regulatory compliance consulting firms can assess whether financials are adaptable or require a Regulation A-specific audit approach.
10. How does data governance affect Regulation A audits?
Weak data governance increases audit risk and review friction. Implementing the best solutions for audit-ready data governance and compliance improves traceability, documentation quality, and overall audit efficiency during qualification.
Are Your Financials SEC-Ready?
Capital raises move faster when audit and compliance work is structured for review from the start. Wahl Street Accountancy Corporation structures audits around SEC expectations from day one, helping companies maintain momentum through qualification. If you’re navigating a Regulation A audit, we’re available to discuss how your audit is shaping up.