Compliance

The BIR Audit Checklist Every Trinidad SME Should Keep

An audit letter from the Board of Inland Revenue (BIR) rarely arrives at a convenient time. The good news is that a BIR audit is a process, not a verdict — and businesses that keep clean, complete records move through it far more comfortably than those scrambling to reconstruct a year they barely documented. This checklist explains how the BIR selects and conducts audits in Trinidad & Tobago, the records every SME should keep, the triggers that draw attention, and how to respond if a query or assessment lands on your desk.

Confirm the detail: audit powers, time limits and objection procedures sit in the Income Tax Act, the VAT Act and related legislation, which are amended from time to time. Treat this as a practical guide and confirm specific deadlines and procedures against current legislation, the latest Finance Act, or with your advisor before acting. Our BIR audit support team can represent you throughout.

How the BIR selects and conducts audits

Selection is partly risk-based and partly random. The BIR uses information it already holds — your filed returns, PAYE and VAT records, third-party data and prior history — to flag returns that look inconsistent or out of line with the norm for your sector. An audit can be a focused desk review of a single issue, or a full examination of your books across several years.

A typical audit follows a recognisable arc:

  1. Notification. You receive a letter identifying the taxes and periods under review and the records the BIR wants to see.
  2. Information gathering. The auditor reviews your returns, ledgers, bank statements, invoices and supporting documents, often with follow-up questions.
  3. Findings. The BIR raises queries on anything it cannot reconcile and gives you a chance to explain or provide further documents.
  4. Assessment. If issues remain, the BIR may issue an assessment adjusting your tax, often with interest and penalties.
  5. Resolution. You either accept the assessment or exercise your right to object and, if necessary, appeal.

Common audit triggers

You cannot eliminate audit risk, but you can avoid waving a flag. The patterns that most often draw scrutiny include:

  • Returns filed late or not at all, or persistent nil and loss returns.
  • VAT inconsistencies — input credits that look high relative to sales, or output VAT that does not track your declared turnover.
  • Income that does not reconcile with bank deposits, lodgements or third-party information.
  • Large or unusual deductions, round-sum expenses, or a sudden jump in costs without an obvious business reason.
  • Director and related-party transactions, loans to or from the company, and benefits that are not properly reported.
  • Cash-intensive businesses and margins that fall outside the range for the sector.
  • Payroll mismatches — PAYE and contributions that do not align with the staff you clearly employ.

The records every Trinidad SME should keep

Good record-keeping is the single most effective audit defence. Keep the following, organised by year and retained for the statutory period (retention requirements run for several years — confirm the exact term in current legislation):

  • Filed returns and proof of filing/payment — corporation tax, VAT, PAYE, Business Levy, Green Fund Levy, and National Insurance, with receipts and confirmations.
  • Sales records — numbered invoices, contracts, point-of-sale reports and a clear audit trail from each sale to the bank.
  • Purchase and expense records — supplier invoices and receipts in your business name, matched to payments. Without a valid invoice you cannot defend an input VAT claim or a deduction.
  • Bank statements for every business account, reconciled monthly to your ledgers.
  • Payroll records — the register, PAYE and NIS computations, and employee files.
  • Asset register — capital purchases, disposals and the capital allowances claimed.
  • General ledger and trial balance tying every transaction together, plus the year-end financial statements.
  • VAT working papers — the calculations behind every bi-monthly return.
The golden rule: if you claimed it, you should be able to prove it with a document in the company's name. Sound bookkeeping and accounting throughout the year is what turns an audit from a crisis into an afternoon.

Your pre-audit checklist

Run this check now, before any letter arrives:

  1. Are all returns filed and up to date across every tax type?
  2. Do your bank statements reconcile to your books every month?
  3. Can you produce a valid invoice for every material expense and input VAT claim?
  4. Are director loans, related-party dealings and benefits documented and reported?
  5. Is your payroll consistent with your declared staff and your PAYE/NIS filings?
  6. Are prior-year working papers and financial statements filed and retrievable?
  7. Do you know who in the business owns the response if a query arrives?

If you answered "no" to any of these, fix it before the BIR asks. A tax health check is a structured way to find the gaps yourself, on your timetable rather than the auditor's.

Responding to queries and assessments

How you respond matters as much as what you have on file. Keep these principles in mind:

  • Acknowledge promptly and meet deadlines. Late or no response can lead to an estimated assessment based on the BIR's assumptions rather than your figures.
  • Be accurate and complete, not chatty. Answer the question asked, provide the documents requested, and avoid volunteering speculation.
  • Keep a paper trail. Record every request, your response and the dates — it protects you if a dispute develops.
  • Get representation early. An advisor who deals with the BIR regularly can frame your position, manage the correspondence and prevent small misunderstandings from becoming assessments.

Objections and appeals

If the BIR issues an assessment you believe is wrong, you have the right to object in writing within the statutory time limit, setting out the grounds and attaching supporting evidence. If the objection is not resolved in your favour, you can appeal to the Tax Appeal Board. These steps are time-bound and procedural — missing a deadline can cost you the right to dispute — so confirm the current limits in legislation and act quickly. Throughout, the strength of your case rests on the same records this checklist asks you to keep.

Audits are far less daunting when the documentation already exists. Build the discipline into your monthly routine, know your rights of objection and appeal, and bring in BIR audit support as soon as a letter arrives. For a sense of where audit activity may be heading, our budget summary for business owners covers the policy signals worth watching, and avoiding the common VAT mistakes removes one of the most frequent triggers entirely.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does the BIR decide who to audit?
Selection is partly risk-based and partly random. The BIR compares your filed returns against the data it holds — PAYE and VAT records, third-party information and your filing history — and flags returns that look inconsistent or out of line with sector norms. Late filing, VAT mismatches and unreconciled income are common triggers.
How long should a Trinidad SME keep its tax records?
Records should be retained for the statutory period, which runs for several years. Keep filed returns, invoices, bank statements, payroll and an asset register organised by year. Confirm the exact retention term against current legislation, but as a rule keep everything that supports a figure on a return until the period is safely closed.
What should I do when I receive a BIR audit or query letter?
Acknowledge it promptly, note the deadline, and answer exactly what is asked with the supporting documents requested — accurate and complete, not speculative. Keep a record of every exchange and get professional representation early, because a late or incomplete response can lead to an estimated assessment based on the BIR's assumptions.
Can I dispute a BIR assessment I think is wrong?
Yes. You can object in writing within the statutory time limit, stating your grounds and attaching evidence. If the objection is not resolved in your favour you can appeal to the Tax Appeal Board. These steps are time-bound, so confirm the current limits and act quickly — missing a deadline can forfeit your right to dispute.
What is the best way to prepare for a possible audit?
Keep clean records year-round and run the pre-audit checklist: all returns filed, bank accounts reconciled monthly, a valid invoice behind every claim, related-party dealings documented, and payroll consistent with your filings. A tax health check is a structured way to find and fix gaps on your own timetable.
How Andersen TT can help: book a free Tax Health Check and we'll review your position against the points above. Get in touch →