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A SOC 1 report is an independent assurance report issued by certified public accountants that evaluates a service organization’s controls relevant to user entities' internal controls over financial reporting.
In plain terms:
A SOC 1 report shows whether a vendor has the right controls in place around the systems or processes it runs that affect a company's financial statements.
It applies specifically to systems and services that impact the financial reporting process.
SOC 1 is relevant when a service organization operates systems or performs services that could affect a company’s financial statements.
Common examples include:
If the output of a system affects financial reporting, financial statement auditors will likely require a SOC 1 report.
For accounting teams, this means identifying third-party systems that support financial processes and obtaining SOC 1 reports from those providers as part of their audit process.
In practice, once a system becomes part of the financial reporting workflow, auditors will expect assurance that the vendor's controls can be relied upon.
Accounting teams are responsible for internal control over financial reporting. That responsibility does not stop at the company’s firewall.
If a third-party service organization impacts financial reporting, accountants must:
External auditors will often request evidence that these steps were performed.
If the service organization lacks a SOC 1 report, the burden shifts back to the accounting team. That can mean expanded audit scope, additional manual testing, and increased compliance costs.
A SOC 1 audit evaluates whether certain controls are:
The report typically includes:
Within both SOC 1 and SOC 2, the organization must also choose a SOC type. Note that the SOC type (Type 1 vs Type 2) is different from the SOC category (SOC 1 vs SOC 2) - confused enough yet?
SOC Type 1 reports evaluate design effectiveness at a specific point in time.
Evaluates both design and operating effectiveness over a period, usually six to twelve months.
Type 2 SOC reports are generally more valuable to accounting teams and financial statement auditors. FloQast has completed both SOC Type 1 and SOC Type 2 examinations.
SOC 1 directly supports compliance with internal control over financial reporting under SOX, typically using the COSO framework.
It connects third-party systems to the broader control environment.
For example:
SOC 1 provides independent assurance that appropriate controls exist to address these risks.
During a financial audit, external auditors often ask:
Failure to provide adequate SOC 1 documentation can result in:
A well-structured SOC 1 report, on the other hand, reduces audit friction and strengthens the organization’s ability to demonstrate oversight of third-party financial reporting controls.
While SOC 2 focuses on security and availability, SOC 1 is specifically tied to financial reporting.
SOC 1 answers the question:
Can companies rely on this system for financial reporting?
SOC 2 answers the question:
Is this system secure and protected?
Both are important, but SOC 1 is uniquely tied to accounting and financial reporting responsibilities, therefore more important for CPAs and accounting teams to understand.
Accounting teams are responsible for reviewing SOC 1 reports, which might feel like a formality at times, but probably warrants more attention than you realized. Not all SOC 1 reports provide the same level of assurance, yet they can have a significant impact on your audit risk.
If certain controls are missing from a SOC 1 report, then your accounting team takes on full responsibility for those areas and may need to perform additional testing beyond what you’d anticipated.
A strong SOC 1 report shifts testing responsibility to the service organization’s auditors across some key areas, providing support for your accounting team and lessening your testing and audit burden. A weak one SOC 1 report might be adding to your accounting team’s burden without them realizing it.
In Part II of this series, we will break down what makes a SOC 1 report strong versus weak, and how accounting teams can evaluate quality effectively.
SOC 1 is a cornerstone of financial reporting assurance in an increasingly outsourced, cloud-based environment.
If your organization relies on third-party systems for financial data, SOC 1 reporting is essential to maintaining accurate financial statements, supporting audits, and protecting stakeholders—as well as your own accounting team.
Understanding SOC 1 empowers accounting teams to reduce risk, streamline audits, and confidently manage the systems that underpin financial reporting.
Take the next step toward stronger financial controls and smoother audits. Get a Demo and see how FloQast helps accounting teams centralize controls, manage compliance, and stay audit-ready.