We synthesize the empirical archival literature on the determinants of auditor choice in an international setting, critique the findings, and offer suggestions for future research. We categorize the determinants into (i) firm‐level ownership variables, (ii) nonownership corporate governance determinants, (iii) economic determinants driven by the risk of information asymmetry, and (iv) country‐level institutional determinants, including legal protection of investors, political connections, and national culture. Our comprehensive review not only enriches the academic literature, but also provides material of considerable interest to investors, practitioners (auditors), and regulators.