In this article:
- Opening Answer
- Why Audits Happen
- Audit Process
- How to Prepare
- What CRA Is Really Looking For
- Expert Support
- FAQ
SR&ED Audit: What to Expect and How to Prepare
Opening Answer
If your SR&ED claim is selected for review, it does not mean something is wrong. It does mean the CRA wants to validate your work and your numbers.
A well-prepared company can move through an audit with minimal disruption and still recover 15% to 35% of eligible costs. A poorly prepared one can see claims reduced by $20,000 to $100,000 or more, even when the work was valid.
For example, a company claiming $280,000 in eligible expenditures could lose $50,000 or more simply because its technical documentation did not clearly explain the uncertainty or its financials did not align with the work.
The audit process is structured and predictable once you understand how the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) evaluates claims.
Why Audits Happen
Not all SR&ED claims are audited, but many are.
Common Triggers
- First-time claimants
- Large or unusually high claims
- Vague or generic technical descriptions
- Inconsistencies between costs and work
- Industry-specific risk patterns
Important Clarification
An audit is not an accusation of wrongdoing. It is a validation process to confirm that your work meets SR&ED criteria and that your expenditures are accurate.
Reality from Experience
From our work across industries, many audited claims are valid but poorly presented. Most issues arise from documentation gaps, not ineligibility.
Audit Process
Understanding the process removes most of the anxiety.
Step 1: Initial Contact
The CRA notifies you that your claim is under review, may request documents up front, and assigns technical and financial reviewers.
Step 2: Information Request
You may be asked to provide:
- Technical explanations
- Supporting documentation
- Financial breakdowns
Step 3: Technical Review
A CRA technical reviewer evaluates:
- Whether there was technological uncertainty
- Whether there was systematic experimentation
- Whether there was advancement
Step 4: Financial Review
A financial reviewer checks:
- Salaries and allocations
- Contractor eligibility
- Expense accuracy
Step 5: Meetings or Interviews
In some cases, the CRA may speak with your engineers or technical staff and ask about the work performed.
Step 6: Outcome
The claim may be accepted in full, accepted in part with adjustments, or in rare cases denied.
Timeline
Reviews typically take 2 to 6 months, depending on complexity.
How to Prepare
Preparation is the difference between a smooth review and a painful one.
1. Strengthen Documentation
You need clear evidence of:
- Technical uncertainty
- Testing and iteration
- Learning outcomes
Start with your SR&ED documentation guide.
2. Align Technical and Financial Data
Every cost should connect to:
- A person
- A project
- A qualifying activity
3. Prepare Your Team
Technical staff should be able to explain:
- What problem they were solving
- Why it was difficult
- What they tried
4. Avoid Over-Explaining or Guessing
During review:
- Stick to facts
- Do not speculate
- Do not reframe work inaccurately
5. Review Before Submission
Many audit issues originate from weak initial claims and poorly structured narratives.
Avoid common pitfalls in our SR&ED mistakes article.
What CRA Is Really Looking For
This is where most businesses misunderstand audits.
The CRA is not asking whether you built something valuable. They are asking:
- What was unknown?
- Why could standard methods not solve it?
- What did you actually test?
- What did you learn?
Key Insight
A technically strong project with weak documentation often performs worse than a moderate project with strong documentation.
Expert Support
Not every audit requires external help, but many benefit from it.
When to Get Support
- First-time audit
- Large claim amounts
- Weak documentation
- Unclear technical narratives
- Previous claim adjustments
What Expert Support Does
- Clarifies technical positioning
- Aligns documentation with CRA expectations
- Prepares your team for questions
- Reduces risk of claim reduction
Real Impact
We regularly help companies recover claims initially reduced by the CRA, defend eligibility under review, and improve outcomes without inflating claims.
The Biggest Audit Mistake
Treating the audit as a defense exercise instead of a clarification exercise. You are not trying to win an argument. You are helping the CRA understand what you did, why it qualifies, and how your costs relate to that work.
FAQ
What is an SR&ED audit?
A review by the CRA to verify that your claim meets eligibility criteria and that your costs are accurate.
How long does an SR&ED audit take?
Typically 2 to 6 months, depending on complexity.
Do all claims get audited?
No, but first-time and larger claims are more likely to be reviewed.
Can my claim be reduced?
Yes, especially if documentation or cost allocation is weak.
How do I prepare for an SR&ED audit?
Ensure strong documentation, align financials with technical work, and prepare your team to explain the work clearly.
Next Step
Most SR&ED audits do not fail because the work is not eligible. They fail because the story is not clear.
We regularly help businesses:
- Defend claims under review
- Strengthen technical narratives
- Recover value from reduced claims
If your claim is under review, or you want to avoid issues before filing, structured audit preparation can make all the difference.
Book an SR&ED audit consultation and get clarity on your position before the CRA makes theirs.