This research examines how numerous directorships, auditor reputation, profitability, and solvency affect audit delay in IDX-listed businesses between 2021 and 2023. To enhance financial reporting timeliness and reliability in Indonesia, the study seeks practical insights for decision-makers, auditors, and regulators. The quantitative study uses EViews 12 to analyze secondary panel data from 722 IDX-listed firms, resulting in 2,166 firm-year observations. It uses descriptive statistics, classical assumption testing, and panel data regression to test hypotheses. Purposive sample selected organizations having comprehensive yearly financial reports and relevant variable data. Key findings suggest that highly reputable auditors, particularly Big Four firms, may take longer due to stricter audit standards and more thorough processes to ensure quality and credibility, which aligns with agency theory by reducing information asymmetry. In contrast, many directorships, profitability, and solvency did not significantly affect audit delay. These findings contrast previous empirical studies and emphasize contextual considerations in audit timeliness. The model explains 74.6% of audit delay variance, leaving 25.4% to other variables.
Priyanto et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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