WA Real Estate Trust Account Audit for Western Australia Agents
WA real estate trust account audits for agencies that need clear Western Australian compliance support, practical audit guidance, and fixed pricing.
- Aligned with Consumer Protection WA guidance under the Real Estate and Business Agents Act 1978
- Prepared for WA real estate and business agents, firms, and body corporates that carry on business during the whole or part of the calendar year
- Audit period 1 January to 31 December; audit report or statutory declaration due by 31 March
- Auditor delivers the verified report to the Commissioner for Consumer Protection and provides a copy to the agent
- Pricing from $749 + GST per trust account

Western Australia Real Estate Trust Account Audit
Guide to Western Australia real estate trust account audit requirements, deadlines, documents, and reporting steps under the Real Estate and Business Agents Act 1978.
Audit Period
1 January to 31 December
Due Date
31 March of the following year
Starting Price
$749 + GST
State audit pathway
What makes the WA pathway different
Western Australian real estate and business agent audits are calendar-year based, with the auditor's verified report or relevant statutory declaration pathway tied to the 31 March deadline.
Work from the calendar year
Prepare records for the 1 January to 31 December audit period, not the 1 July to 30 June period used in several other states.
Confirm approved auditor requirements
WA guidance refers to a duly qualified auditor approved by the Commissioner and the verified report process.
Plan any extra-time request early
If the audit cannot be finished by 31 March, the extra-time pathway should be checked before the deadline.
Audit Requirements
Western Australian real estate and business agents who carry on business during the whole or part of a calendar year must meet these trust audit obligations:
No trust funds received
Section 86 allows a statutory declaration instead of an annual audit report where an agent holding a current triennial certificate neither received nor held any money for or on behalf of another person during the same period.
Qualified Auditors
WA auditor approval
WA audit guidance requires a duly qualified auditor approved by the Commissioner for Consumer Protection. Consumer Protection's audit guide also states the auditor must be registered under Part 9.2 of the Corporations Act 2001.
No Trust Money Held?
A statutory declaration may be lodged in lieu of an audit report where the agent has no accounts to audit and neither received nor held money for or on behalf of another person during the period.
Submission Info
Submission Method
Approved audit report delivered to the Commissioner for Consumer Protection, or statutory declaration lodged in lieu where there are no trust funds to audit
Submitted By
The auditor must deliver the verified report to the Commissioner within 3 months after year end and provide a copy to the agent
Key Details
- •The auditor must lodge the report within 3 months after the end of each calendar year
- •A copy of the verified audit report must also be delivered to the agent
- •The 31 March deadline also applies to statutory declarations lodged instead of an audit report
Non-Compliance
Related AuditsPro guides
WA trust account audit resources
WA extra-time request
WA 31 March timing and the auditor extra-time request context.
Compare state audit deadlines
State-by-state due dates, lodgement pathways, and deadline differences for real estate trust account audits.
Real estate audit guide
What the audit covers, who needs one, what records are reviewed, and how the online audit process works.
Documents to prepare
Bank statements, reconciliations, ledgers, receipts, payments, and other records commonly requested by auditors.
Urgent real estate audit timing
Options when a real estate trust account audit deadline is close and timing depends on complete records, state rules, and auditor availability.
Audit cost guide
How fixed-fee pricing is scoped for trust account audit work.
Official resources
WA audit resources and checklist
Keep the official regulator pages close while preparing the trust account audit records and lodgement details.
Consumer Protection WA – Real Estate and Business Agent audit requirements
Official WA guidance on audit periods, due dates, statutory declarations, and who must lodge
Consumer Protection WA – Auditing real estate agents forms and publications
Official WA forms, publications, and approved documents for real estate trust account compliance
Consumer Protection WA – A guide to auditing settlement agents and real estate and business agents
WA audit guide covering auditor eligibility, forms, and reporting expectations
Why Western Australia Real Estate Agencies
Choose AuditsPro
Experience the difference with professional support designed specifically for Western Australia real estate agents and property management companies. We combine Western Australia real estate expertise, technology, and transparent processes to support your annual reporting and trust account review requirements.
Audit reports prepared with Western Australia requirements in mind
We prepare your trust account audit with reference to Department of Commerce WA guidance and the Real Estate and Business Agents Act 1978 (WA).
Qualified auditors experienced with Western Australia real estate trust accounts
Our team reviews Western Australia real estate trust account records, including property management records, sales deposits, reconciliations, and supporting documents for the audit report.
Transparent pricing from $749 + GST per trust account
We offer flat-fee pricing for Western Australia agencies starting at $749 + GST per trust account. Additional trust accounts and unusual scopes are confirmed before work starts.
Support for Western Australia Real Estate Agencies
We help Western Australia real estate agents and property management companies prepare annual trust account reporting with clear communication and Western Australia-specific audit support. Our approach is designed around Department of Commerce WA guidance, the Real Estate and Business Agents Act 1978 (WA), and current trust account reporting requirements.
Related Trust Account Auditing Services
Western Australia Real Estate Trust Account Audit Requirements
Western Australia requirements, deadlines, and reporting steps for licensed real estate agents. Our audit service helps you prepare annual trust account reporting with the relevant state requirements in mind.
Western Australia (WA)
Consumer Protection WA
Consumer Protection WA
$749 + GST
Multiple trust accounts: $749 + GST each
Due by 31 March
Audit period: 1 January to 31 December
Real Estate and Business Agents Act 1978 (WA)
Trust Account Requirements
Key Audit Requirements
- •Annual audit required for applicable WA real estate trust accounts
- •Calendar-year audit period from 1 January to 31 December
- •Audit report due by 31 March of the following year
- •Use current Consumer Protection WA forms and publications
- •Compliance with Real Estate and Business Agents Act 1978 (WA)
- •Review current WA regulator guidance before preparation and lodgement
Note: WA Consumer Protection guidance says the audit period is the calendar year and the auditor delivers the audit report to the Commissioner by 31 March.
State-Specific Trust Account Audit Information
Get detailed information about trust account audit requirements, deadlines, and reporting steps for your state or territory.
Western Australia Service Areas
Providing professional real estate trust account audits across all regions of Western Australia. Our 100% online process means we can assist your agency wherever you are located.
Perth Metro
- Perth CBD
- North of River
- South of River
- Fremantle
Regional WA
- Mandurah
- Bunbury
- Geraldton
- Albany
Country WA
- Kalgoorlie
- Broome
- Port Hedland
- All WA regions
Western Australia Real Estate Trust Account Audits
Trust account audit pricing for Western Australia real estate agencies with clear fixed fees.
Prompt replies • Fixed pricing • No hidden fees
Questions about pricing?
Ask a pricing question or speak with us before you send documents.
Real Estate Trust Account Audit FAQs
Get answers to the most common questions about real estate trust account audits, state requirements, documents, pricing, and the audit process.
A real estate trust account audit is an independent review of the trust money records kept by a real estate agency. It usually checks bank statements, reconciliations, receipts, payments, client ledgers, and supporting records before the audit report or state lodgement step is completed.
Real estate trust account audits are usually annual when an agency receives or holds trust money, but the period and due date depend on the state. NSW uses a 1 July to 30 June audit period with a 30 September due date, Queensland due dates depend on the licence issue month, and WA commonly uses a calendar-year audit period.
Real estate trust account audits start from $549 + GST per trust account. State pricing is $549 + GST in ACT, NSW, TAS, and VIC; $749 + GST in NT, QLD, SA, and WA. Exact pricing is confirmed before work begins and depends on the state, licence type, trust account count, and scope. If you have multiple trust accounts, each account is assessed individually before the fixed-fee quote is confirmed.
Most real estate trust account audits are completed within 5-10 business days from receipt of all required documentation. The timeline depends on the volume of transactions, quality of record-keeping, and responsiveness in providing requested documents.
Common documents include bank statements, trust account registers, receipts, payment records, deposit records, monthly reconciliations, client ledgers, and relevant correspondence. The final checklist depends on your state, licence type, trust account activity, and the regulator process that applies.
Yes. Each real estate trust account audit is prepared with reference to the state requirements that apply to your agency. We check the records, due dates, and report expectations for your state.
Real estate trust accounts must usually be audited by a qualified, independent auditor who meets the rules for the relevant state or territory. Regulators commonly refer to approved auditors, registered company auditors, professional accounting body membership, public practice certificates, and independence from the agency.
A practical checklist starts with bank statements, monthly reconciliations, client ledgers, receipts, payments, deposit records, trust account registers, supporting correspondence, and previous audit notes. State-specific forms, portal details, and declarations should be added where your regulator requires them.
You should keep trust account reconciliations current and complete. Monthly reconciliations are a common regulator expectation and are one of the first records an auditor will ask for, because they help explain the bank balance, ledger balance, and client money held.
If the audit finds issues, we explain them clearly and outline the next steps. The action needed depends on the issue and your state requirements, but the first step is to understand what is missing or incorrect.
Pricing is calculated per trust account and can vary by state. The total fee is usually the applicable per-account price for your state multiplied by the number of trust accounts being reviewed. We can confirm the exact fixed price once we know your state and account count.
Start with current monthly reconciliations, bank statements, client ledgers, receipts, payment records, and previous audit notes. Keeping trust and business money separate makes the audit much easier.
Yes. The core idea is similar, but each state has its own audit period, due date, reporting format, forms, and submission process. For example, NSW audit results are submitted through the Auditor's Report Online portal, Queensland due dates depend on the licence issue month, and Victoria uses myCAV lodgement after the report is received.
Trust money includes rental payments, sales deposits, advertising fees, maintenance funds, and any other money received on behalf of clients. This money must be kept separate from your business funds and can only be used for its intended purpose as directed by the client.
Each trust account requires individual audit coverage and is assessed separately. The fixed-fee quote depends on the state, licence type, account count, and scope, even when multiple accounts are handled within one audit engagement.
AuditsPro keeps real estate trust account audit pricing competitive by using a secure client portal, structured document checklists, digital workpapers, and state-aware review workflows. The efficiency comes from reducing administration, document chasing, and repeated follow-up. It does not mean client services are offshore or that the audit work is reduced.
Client services, audit coordination, and client portal data management are handled onshore in Australia. Client portal audit documents are managed on Australian AWS infrastructure, including the Sydney region, with important audit information protected by encryption in transit and at rest.
The portal gives real estate agencies a structured checklist, secure upload pathway, document tracking, and clearer follow-up requests. That means auditors can see what is missing earlier, review files in a more organised way, and spend less time on manual administration.
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