True and Fair View – Explained in Simple Words for FYBCom Students

📘 What is the Meaning of “True and Fair View” in Auditing?

Let’s say your friend tells you:

“I scored 80 marks in the exam.”

Now you check their paper and see that:

  • They really got 80 marks (not lying) ✅
  • They didn’t hide any subject where they failed ✅

This means what your friend said is TRUE and FAIR.

Now think of this same idea in auditing.

When an auditor checks the accounts of a company, their job is to see whether the accounts show a True and Fair View.

Let’s break this phrase into two parts:


🔵 1. What is “True”?

“True” means all the figures in the accounts are correct.

👉 No wrong totals
👉 No fake entries
👉 No lying about profit or cash

💡 Example:
If the balance sheet shows ₹1,00,000 in bank, the auditor checks the bank statement to confirm it’s true.


🔵 2. What is “Fair”?

“Fair” means nothing important is hidden.

👉 The accounts should not be made to look better or worse on purpose.
👉 They should not hide losses, hide loans, or trick investors.

💡 Example:
If the company has taken a loan of ₹5 lakhs, it must be clearly shown in the balance sheet.

Scale showing truth and fairness equally
An audit report is only useful when it is both true and fair

Why Is “True and Fair View” Important?

Let’s understand why this is the heart of auditing.


🔹 1. To Help People Make Decisions

People like:

  • Investors
  • Banks
  • Government
  • Company Owners

…look at audited accounts to take big decisions — like giving loans, investing money, paying tax.

If the accounts are not true and fair, these people may take wrong decisions.


🔹 2. To Build Trust

If the auditor says “These accounts show a true and fair view,” it means:
✅ The business is showing real figures
✅ There is nothing hidden
✅ The report is trustworthy

This one sentence builds trust in the whole report.


🔹 3. To Follow the Law

Auditors must follow audit standards and give a final opinion based on whether the accounts are true and fair.

If they are not, they must say so in the report (this is called a qualified report).


📊 Small Table – True vs. Fair (in Simple Terms)

✅ Word💬 Meaning💡 Example
TrueFigures are correct₹5,000 in books = ₹5,000 in bank
FairNothing important is hiddenShows all loans, losses, expenses

📸 Image Suggestion 2

Auditor’s checklist for true and fair view
Auditor checks if accounts are both true and fair before giving final opinion

✍️ What the Auditor Writes in Report (Real Example)

“In our opinion, the financial statements give a true and fair view of the financial position of the company.”

This line means:
✅ Auditor has checked everything
✅ The company is being honest
✅ People can trust the accounts


📌 Conclusion – True and Fair = Honest + Clear Accounts

The main job of the auditor is to confirm if the company’s accounts are:

  • True → Everything is correct
  • Fair → Nothing is hidden

If both are there, then the audit report helps everyone — from students to investors — to understand the real picture of the business.

🧠 Remember:
An account full of numbers is only useful if it’s true and fair.

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