
The shift represents one of the most significant changes to India’s audit architecture in a decade and comes at a time when governments are implementing larger technology-based programs that require closer and more consistent oversight.
Under the current system, most CAG audits are conducted after the end of the financial year. This limits his ability to identify risks early and reduces room for course correction during the project. The new approach aims to close this gap by allowing CAG to review data, documents and progress metrics as they are created, rather than waiting for the end of the project.
According to a CAG official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, the institutional shift towards real-time and remote audits is already underway and the full rollout could begin in late 2025 or early 2026.
Why is this change happening now?
Traditional CAG audits are typically submitted one to three years after major decisions have been made, greatly reducing their usefulness for course correction. High-profile cases such as 2G spectrum allocation and coal block allocation were audited long after licenses were issued that limited the government’s ability to prevent losses, although audits later became politically significant. A report on 2G, presented in 2010, estimated a ₹1.76 trillion loss; an audit of the coal block in 2012 pointed to potential profits ₹1.86 trillion to private companies. But by then the damage was already done.
Several other lesser-known CAG audits have also shown that had the findings been available earlier — or during implementation — much of the damage could have been contained. For example, the Delhi Liquor Excise Policy case (conducted in November 2021; CAG report released in February 2025) revealed serious procedural lapses that persisted during implementation.
Similarly, the CAG audit of the ‘Project Arrow’ scheme at post offices found that money order delivery and e-money order booking at selected post offices in Delhi, North East India, Uttar Pradesh and Gujarat fell below the prescribed performance threshold. The scheme was launched in April 2008, but the CAG report came out only in 2015, long after the problems had taken root.
Real-time auditing seeks to prevent such outcomes by helping ministries detect irregularities early. This shift is driven by the understanding that public programs are much larger, faster and more complex today than they were a decade ago, and that digital systems enable granular visibility into spending and delivery in real time.
How will real-time audits work?
CAG will gain access to live datasets through newly integrated digital systems operating across states and departments, spanning procurement platforms, payment modules, progress dashboards, contract management tools and beneficiary databases. Instead of scanning all the files a month after the project ends, auditors review them as they are generated.
Under the new platforms of “monitoring performance audits” and “entity-specific compliance audits”, planned and actual milestones will be continuously recorded and any deviations will trigger structured alerts to functional departments and field audit offices. This will enable auditors to detect red flags – such as collusive bidding patterns, identical IP addresses for multiple bidders, cost overruns or unexplained delays – early in the execution cycle. Until then, the ministries will be able to intervene the funds are spent continuously, not after the end of the project.
Dr Shyma Jose, Assistant Professor of Economics at Jesus and Mary College, Delhi University, said, “CAG’s move towards real-time auditing is a positive step towards Viksit Bharat as it enables monitoring of exchequer money for projects under ministries and public sector departments while they are ongoing, ensuring better governance and efficient use of public funds.
She added: “This approach will increase the accountability, transparency and efficiency of public spending by providing timely insight and enabling corrective action during project implementation. However, this step will require strong technology integration and the development of a robust audit system.”
What types of government programs will it affect?
It will have the biggest impact on large, capital-intensive projects such as highways, railways, power projects, telecommunications infrastructure, oil exploration, irrigation, housing and rural development programmes. These industries are particularly prone to delays, cost overruns and quality lapses, making them ideal candidates for real-time control.
The move to real-time audits will also affect schemes with high public interaction – such as spending on health missions, welfare payments, municipal projects and state-level rural works – where leakages and poor monitoring are long-term problems.
What does this mean for government departments?
Departments will need to maintain accurate, timely, and machine-readable project execution data. Report formats may require reworking; internal audit processes will need to be strengthened; and implementing agencies will face greater scrutiny over the course of projects. This could reduce the scope for arbitrary practices and improve accountability by increasing numbers compliance pressure on employees.
What does this mean for India’s public finances?
If implemented well, it can reduce unnecessary spending, prevent cost escalation and improve asset quality in real time. They can also narrow the gap between policy announcements and implementation on the ground, a recurring problem in India’s public expenditure system. This is in line with the government’s wider efforts to modernize public procurement, digitize payments and build more transparent frameworks for project monitoring.
According to CAG’s FY24 report, 115 audits were completed this year, contributing to recovery worth ₹6,266.68 million crowns. A continuous audit system could make such recoveries more preventive than remedial.
What will success depend on?
The success of real-time audits will depend on how seamlessly CAG integrates with digital systems across departments and whether unions view it as a management tool rather than a compliance burden. The shift marks a new phase in India’s audit ecosystem — a shift from post-mortem inspections to live oversight of how public money is spent.
Abhash Kumar, a business economist, said: “The idea is strong, but success will depend on sustained coordination and capacity building across departments. Rollout is achievable but likely to be gradual rather than immediate.”





