Govt completes digital audit system rollout in 30 field offices
The government has completed the rollout of the Audit Management Information System in 30 field audit offices across Pakistan. Official documents say all audit teams are now using the digital platform and conducting risk-based audits.

ISLAMABAD: The government has finished implementing the Audit Management Information System (AMIS) in 30 field audit offices across the country, according to official documents.
The documents, available with Wealth Pakistan, show that audit teams in all of the field offices are now using the system, marking a complete shift from manual procedures to a digital audit process.
The records state that the rollout has reached 100 percent progress in AMIS deployment. With the system now in place across the 30 offices, audits being conducted through AMIS are risk-based, the documents said.
According to the official documents, the move is aimed at improving the quality of audits by directing attention to higher-risk areas and making better use of available resources. The transition is also expected to support greater transparency in the audit process.
Full transition to digital process
The implementation means field audit offices have moved away from paper-based and manual audit handling to a digital system for managing audit work. The official documents indicate that all audit teams in the relevant offices are actively operating through AMIS.
The government’s completion of the rollout in 30 field offices represents the full adoption of the system in those locations. The documents further note that the use of risk-based audits under AMIS is intended to strengthen audit effectiveness by concentrating efforts where risks are considered higher.
Officials say this approach can improve how audit resources are allocated, as teams are able to focus on areas requiring closer scrutiny instead of relying on broader manual methods.
Focus on transparency and audit quality
The official documents describe the digital transition as a step toward strengthening transparency. They also link the new system to improvements in audit quality through a more structured and risk-based method.
Under the previous manual setup, audit work was handled without the digital framework now provided by AMIS. With all field audit teams in the 30 offices now using the platform, the government has completed the transition outlined in the documents.
The documents do not indicate partial implementation in any of the listed field offices, and instead describe the deployment as complete. They state that the system is now being actively used by all audit teams in the field offices covered under the rollout.
The completion of AMIS deployment in these offices marks a significant administrative shift in how audits are carried out, with the government linking the digital system to better targeting of high-risk areas, improved use of resources, and stronger transparency in audit operations.
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