Private Equity Info's Research Database tracks the service providers used by private funds across a broad range of asset classes, including private equity, hedge funds, venture capital funds, real estate funds, securitized asset funds, and liquidity funds.
Among the service providers we track are auditors, administrators, custodians, prime brokers, and marketers. In this study, we focus on fund auditors.
The database currently includes 642 audit firms serving 79,590 private funds representing $30.7 trillion in assets under management (AuM). This analysis examines the competitive landscape for fund audit services across all fund types and then takes a closer look at the private equity market specifically.
Every fund has an auditor. The choice of audit firm is a signal.
A boutique auditor on a scaling fund is a transition indicator. When a $400M fund still uses a Tier 4 audit firm, one of the 498 with fewer than ten engagements, that relationship has a ceiling. It won't survive institutional fundraising or a platform acquisition. Audit transitions cluster around capital events: secondary sales, recap rounds, sell-side mandates.
A Big 4 audit signals institutional readiness. For PE investors, auditor choice is a proxy for how the management team thinks about operational infrastructure: fee tolerance, diligence posture, willingness to absorb compliance cost. A $1B+ platform still running on a mid-market auditor carries a different risk profile than one already at EY or PwC.
That said, there's a structural constraint the data doesn't show: independence. Every audit engagement a firm takes on creates a potential conflict for the entire firm. At the Big 4's scale, thousands of fund clients each, independence constraints are a meaningful operational reality. It's one reason a platform can't always choose one of the big firms even when it wants to. The mid-tier firms offer a relief valve for this very scenario.
The MID tier is where the competitive dynamics reside. The 32 firms in the 100–999 fund band hold $702 billion in AuM. This is the only segment where market share is realistically contestable. The Big 4 don't compete for boutique mandates. For audit firms considering where to build specialist capacity, the mid-market is the band with real upside.
The AuM concentration amongst top audit firms shows a complete market domination. Of the 642 audit firms, only 11 firms audit more than 1,000 funds. Collectively, these 11 represent 96.6% of the total audited fund AuM. The Big 4 Fund Auditors alone capture 89% of all fund audit work (by AuM).
EY, PwC, KPMG, and Deloitte audit $27.4 trillion in private fund assets: 89.1% of the total. EY is in a class of its own: $9.81 trillion across 14,086 funds, which works out to roughly one in three audited US private fund dollars. PwC runs second at $7.67 trillion. KPMG and Deloitte are nearly tied at $5.0 trillion and $4.9 trillion respectively.
Below the Big 4, a second tier is visible: BDO at $590B, RSM at $579B, Grant Thornton at $518B, EisnerAmper at $248B, and Frank Rimerman at $196B. These are serious practices: hundreds of RIA clients each, thousand-plus fund books. But the jump from BDO to Deloitte is a 8.3x step in AUM.
Sort by fund count instead of dollars and the structure sharpens. Eleven firms are running what are effectively industrial-scale audit operations: over 1,000 funds each. Below them, 32 firms hold mid-market books in the 100–999 range. Another 101 operate as regional specialists. The bottom 498 firms: the full boutique tail: together account for fewer than 1.4% of all audited funds and only 0.2% of total AuM.
While the Big 4 are distinctly separate from the rest of the audit firms, a common misreading of the audit concentration story is that of a structural gap separating various strata of audit firms with empty bands of AuM where no firms operate. That reading is an artifact of limiting the plot to the top ten firms. When all 642 firms are plotted on AuM versus fund count, the distribution fills as a nearly continuous gradient from the boutique end to the industrial scale of the Big 4, with the only significant gap in the $1 - $5 trillion AuM range (between firms #4 and #5).
The long tail is real and populated, but it represents a distinct population of clients: emerging managers, first-time funds, seed-stage vehicles: not a competitive alternative to the Big 4 for established platforms.
Chart the dollar base by rank tier and the concentration is immediate. The top four firms alone fill most of the frame. The next six add roughly seven percentage points. Firms ranked from #11 - #50 only add three percentage points. The remaining 592 firms, everything ranked 51 and below, collectively hold 0.4% of audited AuM. The long tail is real by headcount; it is negligible by assets under management.
The 642 auditors collectively cover 79,590 individual private funds across multiple fund types. By fund count, Private Equity leads at 43.1% (34,756 funds), followed by Hedge Funds at 20.9% and Venture Capital at 15.4%.
By AuM, the ranking reverses. Hedge Funds carry 45.5% of audited assets ($14.1 trillion), driven by large average ticket sizes. Private Equity follows at 33.4%. Venture Capital, which looms large by fund count, accounts for just 5.5% of AuM. The fund-count lens and the dollar lens are telling different stories about the same market.
| # | AUDITOR | AUDITED AUM | RIA CLIENTS | FUNDS | AUM / CLIENT | TIER |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | EY | $9.8T | 1,985 | 14,086 | $4.96B | Big 4 |
| 2 | PwC | $7.7T | 1,924 | 14,458 | $4.03B | Big 4 |
| 3 | KPMG | $5.0T | 2,069 | 10,097 | $2.42B | Big 4 |
| 4 | Deloitte | $4.9T | 1,452 | 10,893 | $3.43B | Big 4 |
| 5 | BDO | $589.8B | 792 | 3,019 | $745M | Mid |
| 6 | RSM | $578.6B | 790 | 3,356 | $738M | Mid |
| 7 | Grant Thornton | $518.0B | 477 | 2,098 | $1.10B | Mid |
| 8 | EisnerAmper | $248.3B | 563 | 1,654 | $441M | Mid |
| 9 | Frank Rimerman | $196.1B | 515 | 2,332 | $381M | Mid |
| 10 | CohnReznick | $105.3B | 436 | 1,695 | $302M | Mid |
If we only consider Auditors for Private Equity Funds, the statistics are:
The RIA audit market doesn't break along clean size lines. Eleven firms dominate by any measure that matters. Another 133 hold the middle. 498 boutiques populate the tail. The opportunity for audit firms sits at building market share in the mid-tier space.