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Municipal Audit Law Changes

Recently Completed Rulemaking

Amends Minimum Standards for Agreed-Upon Procedures (AUP) of Oregon Municipal Corporations

Impact of HB 2110

During the 2023 legislative session, House Bill 2110 amended Municipal Audit Law (ORS 297.405-297.990); these changes are effective January 1, 2024. Key changes include:

Updated thresholds: Audits are required for counties and school districts and are now required for entities spending more than $1 million annually — an increase from $500,000. All other entities may be eligible for an audit exemption. Entities that do not spend more than $250,000 may be eligible to file a self-prepared report in lieu of audit.

Report Type
Threshold as of January 1, 2024
Audit> $1,000,000
AUP≥ $250,000 - $1,000,000
Self-Prepared≤ $250,000
  • Agreed-Upon Procedures (AUP) reporting: Replacing review reports, AUP reporting directs auditors to perform and report results of procedures specified in the Oregon Minimum Standards (OAR 162-040). The procedures will address certain components of financial reporting, operations, and compliance.
  • Filing fees: As determined by entity spending, increased fees will range from $40 to $500.
Spending Over
Spending Not Over
Annual Fee
$0
$50,000
$40
$50,000
$150,000
$80
$150,000
$250,000
$150
$250,000
$500,000
$250
$500,000
$1,000,000
$300
$1,000,000
$5,000,000
$350
$5,000,000
$10,000,000
$400
$10,000,000
$50,000,000
$450
$50,000,000$500
  • Definitions: The definition of expenditures is removed from statute and will be developed in Oregon Administrative Rulemaking. The new definition will be used consistently in determining the reporting threshold and annual filing fee. The definition of cost audits for counties that perform road work will be developed in Oregon Administrative Rulemaking.
  • Withholdings: The withholdings provision for cities and counties that don’t file on time is removed.