Example: How to Adopt IFRS 16 Leases
In my last article I tried to outline the strategy and your choices when implementing the new lease standard IFRS 16 Leases.
I am grateful for many responses and comments I got from you. Almost all e-mails I received from you asked me to publish solved numerical example to see how to implement IFRS 16 in practice.
Therefore, unlike in my other usual articles, this time I’ll solve one example with one specific lease contract for you.
You might well know that the IFRS 16 affects mostly lessees who are involved in operating leases, because under the new rules they need to bring the assets from off-balance sheet to the daily light.
In other words, they will no longer be permitted to book all rental expenses from operating leases in profit or loss, but they will need to recognize the lease liability and the right of use asset.
Therefore, in this article, I illustrate the application of the full retrospective approach and modified retrospective approach to IFRS 16 adoption.
Ready for the example? Here you go!
Example: Operating lease in the lessee’s accounts under IFRS 16
ABC, the manufacturing company, needs to adopt the new standard IFRS 16 Leases in the reporting period ending 31 December 2019.
During the preparatory works, ABC discovered that the operating lease contract related to a machine might require some adjustments.
ABC entered into the contract on 1 January 2017 for 5 years, annual rental payments are CU 100 000 in arrears (that is, 31 December each year) and at the end of the lease term, the machine will be returned back to the lessor. The economic life of a machine is 10 years.
How can ABC restate the contract under IFRS 16 using both full retrospective and modified retrospective approach?
Use the discount rate of 3%.
Little note about the discount rate
If you are a lessee, then be careful about the selection of the appropriate discount rate, because its definition in IAS 17 no longer applies.
Here, the new definition in IFRS 16 says that you should derive the interest rate implicit in the lease from:
- The lease payments,
- The unguaranteed residual value,
- The fair value of the underlying asset and
- The initial direct costs of the lessor.
This is very hard and sometimes unrealistic, because most lessors won’t share the unguaranteed residual values and their initial direct costs.
Therefore, most lessees will need to use the incremental borrowing rate – that is, the rate at which they would be able to get the new borrowings for acquisition of the same asset with similar terms.
This is quite judgmental, but at least it’s more realistic than asking your lessor for additional information in most cases.
In this numerical example, let’s assume that given 3% is the ABC’s incremental borrowing rate.
Presenting the contract under IAS 17 and IFRS 16
Before you start drafting your journal entries to adopt IFRS 16 and cease reporting the contract under IAS 17, you need to see clearly how you reported that contract under both sets of rules.
Operating lease contract under IAS 17
Here, it’s very simple and straightforward: ABC accounted for all the lease payments from the operating lease directly in profit or loss.
Operating lease contract under IFRS 16
Under IFRS 16, ABC needs to recognize the right of use asset and the lease liability.
The lease liability is calculated as all the lease payments not paid at the commencement date discounted by the interest rate implicit in the lease or incremental borrowing rate.
I have done that for you in the following table:
Note: Discount factor in the first year is calculated as 1/((1+3%) to the power of year 1), etc.
Fine, we have the lease liability.
The right of use asset equals to the lease liability at the commencement date, plus lessee’s initial direct costs, plus some other things – but in this case, we have nothing like that, so let’s just say it’s the same as the lease liability.
Under IFRS 16, the initial journal entry would be:
-
Debit ROU (right of use) asset: CU 457 971
-
Credit Lease liability: CU 457 971
Subsequently, ABC needs to take care about 2 things:
- Depreciation of the ROU asset: Let’s say it’s straight line over the lease term of 5 years, thus it’s CU 91 594 per year (CU 457 971/5).
- Lease payments: Each lease payment of CU 100 000 is split between the repayment of the lease liability and interest.
I’ve done that in the following table:
Compare the accounting under IAS 17 and IFRS 16
To calculate the adjustment in equity related to this contract, let’s summarize the profit or loss impact of the lease in individual years under both IAS 17 and IFRS 16:
As you can see, total profit or loss impact of both IAS 17 and IFRS 16 application is the same CU 500 000, however, the timing is a bit different.
So, now we have set everything and let’s see how to make adjustment in equity and how to present the restatement under both full and modified retrospective approaches.
I described both approaches in this article, so I won’t repeat it here and let me focus on numbers.
Full retrospective approach
ABC adopts IFRS 16 in its financial statements for the year ending 31 December 2019, and that means that the transition date is 1 January 2018.
We need to restate all numbers for the comparative period, too.
Most of the work has been done above (see tables 1-3), so I’ll draft the journal entries here:
- Restatement of opening balances of the earliest period presented (that is: BEFORE 1 January 2018):
- a) Recognizing ROU asset and lease liability:
-
Debit ROU (right of use) asset: CU 457 971
-
Credit Lease liability: CU 457 971
-
- b) Reversal of the lease payments before 1 January 2018 under IAS 17 (there was just one):
-
Debit Cash: CU 100 000
-
Credit Retained earnings (equity): CU 100 000
I know, I know! No cash moved! Wait until we are done with this exercise. This is just to illustrate that in fact, you are reversing the “old entries” and then making the “new entries”.
And why retained earnings and not profit or loss?
Because you are making this entry on 1 January 2018 and at this date, all profit or loss accounts from 2017 were transferred to the retained earnings.
-
- c) Accounting for the lease payments before 1 January 2018 under IFRS 16 (there was just one):
-
Debit Lease liability: CU 86 261
-
Debit Retained earnings (equity): CU 13 739 – this is for the interest
-
Credit Cash: CU 100 000
Note: The numbers come from table 2 for the year 1 (2017).
-
- d) Accounting for the depreciation of the ROU asset before 1 January 2018 under IFRS 16 (there was just one year):
-
Debit Retained earnings (equity): CU 91 594
-
Credit ROU asset: CU 91 594
-
In fact, you can do all 4 entries in one adjustment and it would look something like:
-
Debit ROU asset: CU 366 377 (CU 457 971 less depreciation of CU 91 594)
-
Debit Retained earnings in equity: CU 5 333 (-100 000+13 739+91 594, or see table 3 for the year 1)
-
Credit Lease liability: CU 371 710 (CU 457 971 less the lease liability repayment of CU 86 261, or see table 2 for the year 1)
In reality, you would adjust in in 1 single entry, but I wanted to show the rationale behind, its breakdown and logic.
- a) Recognizing ROU asset and lease liability:
- Restatement of the comparative period (year 2018):
Here, you are only restating the 2nd lease payment made. As I’ve illustrated the breakdown of all entries above, let me show you just one summarizing entry here:
-
Debit Lease liability: CU 88 849
-
Debit Interest (profit or loss of 2018): CU 11 151
-
Debit Depreciation (profit or loss of 2018): CU 91 594
-
Credit ROU asset: CU 91 594
-
Credit Operating lease expenses (profit or loss of 2018): 100 000
The numbers come from table 2 for the year 2 (2018).
-
- Restatement of the current period (year 2019):
Normally, you would have already applied IFRS 16 in 2019, but if not and you are doing everything during the closing works, here’s the entry:
-
Debit Lease liability: CU 91 514
-
Debit Interest (profit or loss of 2019): CU 8 486
-
Debit Depreciation (profit or loss of 2019): CU 91 594
-
Credit ROU asset: CU 91 594
-
Credit Operating lease expenses (profit or loss of 2019): 100 000
-
OK, that’s for the entries and adjustments.
If you apply the full retrospective approach, the problem is that you have to report the comparative period – year 2018 in this case – under both IAS 17 and IFRS 16:
- In the financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2018, you are still applying IAS 17, so your current numbers for 2018 are under IAS 17, but
- In the financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2019, you apply the new IFRS 16 and also your comparatives need to be stated under the same rules – thus you need to book the above entries n. 1 and n.2 carefully.
How would your financial statements look like?
Here you go:
The statement of financial position (extract) is here:
All the numbers related to the lease liability come from table 2 above.
The extract from profit or loss statement:
Now, let’s show the modified approach.
Modified retrospective approach
Under the modified approach, ABC needs to make an equity adjustment on 1 January 2019 – that is at the beginning of the current reporting period.
Comparative numbers remain the same as presented before – so no restatement.
This is a way easier method to apply than the full retrospective approach, because you do not restate the previous years’ numbers.
However, the price for this relief is lower comparability.
It is quite difficult to compare current year under IFRS 16 with the previous year under IAS 17 and it does not say much about how your leases developed.
Just see it for yourself in the below extracts from the financial statements.
Before you jump into the journal entries, please note that I assumed the same discount rate at the date of application as original discount rate – just for the sake of this example, because thus I don’t need to recalculate the amounts from full approach.
In reality, you need to measure the lease liability under modified retrospective approach as present value of the remaining lease payments discounted by the rate at the initial application. You can revise the same example taking different discount rates into account here.
In this example, lease liability is effectively measured as present value of the remaining lease payments discounted by the original discount rate (as taken from above).
Let’s draft the journal entries:
- Restatement of opening balances at 1 January 2019:
- a) Recognizing ROU asset and lease liability:
-
Debit ROU (right of use) asset: CU 457 971
-
Credit Lease liability: CU 457 971
-
- b) Reversal of the lease payments before 1 January 2019 under IAS 17 (there were two):
-
Debit Cash: CU 200 000
-
Credit Retained earnings (equity): CU 200 000
-
- c) Accounting for the lease payments before 1 January 2019 under IFRS 16 (there were two):
-
Debit Lease liability: CU 175 110
-
Debit Retained earnings (equity): CU 24 890 (= interest)
-
Credit Cash: CU 200 000
Note: The numbers come from table 2 for the years 1 and 2 – you need to make a total for these 2 years (2017 and 2018).
-
- d)Accounting for the depreciation of the ROU asset before 1 January 2019 under IFRS 16 (there were 2 years):
-
Debit Retained earnings (equity): CU 183 188
-
Credit ROU asset: CU 183 188
-
-
Debit ROU asset: CU 274 782 (CU 457 971 less depreciation of CU 91 594*2)
-
Debit Retained earnings in equity: CU 8 079 (-200 000+24 890+183 188, or see table 3 for the years 1 and 2)
-
Credit Lease liability: CU 282 861 (CU 457 971 less the lease liability repayments of CU 86 261 and CU 88 849, or see table 2 for the years 1 and 2)
Similarly as with the full approach, you can make just one aggregate entry instead of these four:
- a) Recognizing ROU asset and lease liability:
- Restatement of the current period (year 2019):
It’s the same as under the full retrospective approach and if you have accounted for your operating leases under IAS 17 during the whole 2019, then you need to do this adjustment:
-
Debit Lease liability: CU 91 514
-
Debit Interest (profit or loss of 2019): CU 8 486
-
Debit Depreciation (profit or loss of 2019): CU 91 594
-
Credit ROU asset: CU 91 594
-
Credit Operating lease expenses (profit or loss of 2019): 100 000
-
Note: Here, I measured the ROU asset as if IFRS 16 has always been applied – in this case, it was easier for me as I have already calculated all the numbers above.
However, you can measure your ROU asset in the amount of the lease liability. This would be even easier, because you would not have to recalculate ROU asset in the past. You would simply calculate the lease liability (=present value of the remaining lease payments) and that’s it.
What about the ABC’s financial statements?
Here you go:
The extract from the statement of financial position:
Please note that there are zeros for the comparative year 2018 – the reason is obvious. We are presenting the previous year under IAS 17 and there was no lease liability and right of use asset under IAS 17.
The extract from profit or loss:
This was just a basic example with a very simple and straightforward contract. If you’d like to learn more about IFRS 16, its application, adoption and see many practical examples solved in Excel, then I recommend checking out my IFRS Kit – IFRS 16 is extensively covered!
Also, here’s the same example illustrating different transition options and practical expedients, so check it out.
Any questions or comments?
Let me know below – thanks!
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Hi Siliva ,
Great Example, I learn a lot from you.
In my company we rent an office for 5 years from 01/04/2019 till 31/03/2024, monthly rent is 100K and we will pay in advance every 3 month. also we took 6 month for free so our first payment start from 01/09/2019 for 3 months (Sep, October and November). also there is increment 5% yearly ! ( we will have Mixed Stream of payment . Then How we can calculate the PV in our case ? Thanks in advance.
also can we consider the 5% yearly increase .. variable lease payment or it is fixed since we know how much is it. Thanks .. appreciate your support.
Hi Silvia. Great article! Thank you.
So in a case where the practical expedient is applied to recognise ROU asset value to be same as value of lease liability on the date of adoption – there is no impact on opening equity?
As I wrote above – no, in most cases.
For a lessee with 1m liability on the B/S how will the transition affect the item.
Does it goto P&L.
Hi Silvia,
Thank you for sharing knowledge on IFRS 16.
Please help me in this query. If I chose modified retrospective option 1, ROU asset measured from lease commencement date, and as on 31.12.2018 there is prepaid rent in balance sheet, how to deal with prepaid rent? In option 2, we can add to ROU but what we will do in option 1.
Hi Silvia,
How to identified short term and long term liabilities?
Thanks,
Hi Silvia,
I’m just wondering what happens if you stop business and have to wind up operations. You have an ROU asset on the Balance Sheet, and a liability for the lease. You cannot dispose of the ROU asset however your liability is contractually binding so you cannot offset there, what would be the logic and approach?
Hi Silvia,
How will I discount the rate if payment is done on a monthly basis? Hoping for your response.
If you enter monthly payment into each row, then your IRR will be monthly rate, not annual.
Dear Silvia,
First of all thanks alot, my question is that if we record the ROU and Leased liability in financials on same amount on 1 January 2019. Will there be any impact on Equity?
In some cases no.
Hi Silvia, in what cases there would be an impact on equity? As we have recorded both ROU and lease liability at same value. Okay lets say if there was a prepayment of $ 100, even in this case the ROU will be debited with prepayment of $ 100 and prepaid asset account is credited, no impact on equity… please correct if i am wrong
Hi..
We have Retail Business as well as Manufacturing Unit. We take rental from Landlord for 5-10 years for a monthly rent. Also Factory is taken monthly rental for 15 years renewable contract. Are the Shop Rental & Factory Rental in the Scope of ROU/IFRS 16? We use to show rental expense in P/L statement. And Advance payment to Landlord as Advance, Deposit & Prepayment under Current Asstet
Based on the information provided, it appears that the shop and the factory will fall in the scope of IFRS 116. Under IFRS 116, you are require to identify if a contact contain a lease. In your situation, it will appear so. Hence you will need to compute the right of use of assets and the lease liabilities and account them according. As for the treatment on them, Silva has already covered them.
Hope this helps.
I’m very confuse on the new FRS116. I do have few type on lease, unsure does it fall under FRS116 which mean need capitalize and depreciation every month as my current practice is the lease fees is capture under PL. Can help me to identify the lease is it subject to the new method
1) office rental pay every month
2) Photocopier rental pay every month – rent the photocopier for few years and can renew when the contract due
3) Storage rental
Thanks
Hi Siew,
yes, it may seem confusing at first, but if you follow the rules, then it’s not so bad. I am sorry, but I cannot identify lease from this scarce information – every single option 1-3 may contain a lease and its accounting depends on the specific contract.
Hi Silvia,
Everything is clear for every lease that started from 1/1. What happens if the lease started on a different date?
Real case scenario:
Lease period: 01/08/2017 – 31/7/2023
Reporting date: 31/12
Frequency of payments: 1 annually payment every 1/8/20XX
We have decided to go with modified approach and the option that ROU Assets = Lease Liability.
Q.1) Have we recognize the ROU asset and liability on 01/01/2019 or on 01/08/2019?
Q.2) Does the depreciation of ROU Assets starting from 01/01/2019 or from 01/08/2019?
Q.3) Interest expense on lease liability will be start from 01/01/2019 or on 01/08/2019?
Q.4) NPV calculation of remaining lease installment will be start from 01/01/2019 or from 01/08/2019?
My point of view is that all of them will be 01/01/2019.
Depreciation, interest expense and annually installment recognized in each reporting period will be calculated on a proportionate basic. Additionally, at each reporting date we will have a prepayment amount that relates to the period 1/1/ – 31/7 of the following year.
Please advise.
Hi Kila,
I think it is clear even if the lease started on a different date. I don’t agree with your view – you have to start the lease accounting at the commencement date, that is when the asset has been made available to the lessee (I assume 1/8/2017). And of course, all accounting entries start from that single date, it is the matter of drafting your NPV table as you named it.
But I know what you mean – since you have just one payment that does not happen to coincide with the beginning or the end of the reporting period, then what should you do? As a quick advice, make your table monthly, not annually, hence each row will represent month, not year. Then your cash flows will be zeros most of the time, except for one annual payment in August. And go from there.
Dear Silvia,
Please, express your opinion in-respect to ROU (Open yard for a period of 50 years expiring on 2056). In our Financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2018., its desclosed as Costs – Acc-Amortization & Amortization Expense (No lease liabilities in our case because its fully paid Open Yard) .We would like to know what would be the correct approach under IFRS 16 for the same.
Thank you & Best regards
Hi Silvia,
Would a deposit on a leased property be categorized as direct cost?
kind regards
Thanks
Hi Nancy, is it refundable? Or is it the first downpayment?
Hi Silvia,
I have some that are refundable and others which are a down payment.
Kind regards
Nancy
Down payment is generally taken into account together with other lease payments (your lease liability is decreased by downpayment and ROU asset changes). Refundable deposit given to the lessor as a collateral is a financial asset and is not treated as a lease payment (because it does not related to right to use the asset). So, you need to treat it mostly at amortized cost and any difference between its nominal amount and fair value is taken to ROU asset (something like additional prepaid lease payment).
Hi, can show us a sample with refundable deposit?
Meaning difference between nominal amount and fair value, need to add in ROU asset like initial direct cost incurred? and calculate depreciation using straight line?
Hi Silvia
What would you do with in the situation that you have to consolidate and eliminate the IFRS 16 transactions? do you have an example on this already? it would be almost impossible, considering you use the second option with regards the modified retrospective way of calculating the Asset?
Would appreciate the help
Thanks
I still do not understand how IFRS16 works for rental of an office space in a building for example.
What exactly are the double entries? What if you have to pay rent in advance quarterly?
Can you do a clear example for rental agreements for office spaces from the perspective of the company renting the office space ? ?
Hi Suzie, well, this is quite complex question to be responded within a comment. Please check out the IFRS Kit, it leads you through similar cases step by step.
Thanks !
Hello,
Im new to this and I have a question.
Assume i pay rent every 3 month for the period, example I pay in January for Jan-Mar.
Perviously, in Janauary i would expense Jan portion and Feb and march will go to prepaid rent, Now under IFRS 16, I will have to reduce my lease liability and expense interest every month. My question what do i do will the rent i paid for feb and march? should it still go to prepaid rent? or shall i reduce my lease liability and expense interest for 3 months in january?
Hi Silvia,
ii your example above, how will the cashflow look like, this is becouse ROU & Lease liability are different?
Hi Silvia,
Quick question, my company has leases with monthly payments however we are constantly paying on different dates depending on when the A/P run is. So for example the lease calculations for June will have 6 payments in the model but in practice, we have already made July payment. Would I still record the July payment under lease liability account or should I use a prepaid account to keep things simple?
Thanks!
Hi Annie, if you use prepaid account to keep things simple, then you are effectively making an accounting error and the question is whether the error is material or not. If you have many leases like that, the aggregate error might be material and in this case I would change your lease calculations.
Hi, Silvia
I am wondering on how to adjust the old contracts that has not expired yet? How to adjust with the remaining payment of the contract? Do we have to recalculate from the beginning of the contract or keep going with the remaining fee?
Hi Silvia,
What about the lease is 5 years & 4 Months,
what happens to the Lease Liability b/F for the second Year (the amount to use to calculate the Interest for the Year), is it correct to subtract the PV of the 4 months which is way less than the 5 full years?.
Hi, what is the entry if the lease terminate early suddenly while the calculation for ROU/ RE impact and lease liability have been calculated.
Hello,
I have one question regarding the leases.
How to treat a lease contract (Blood lap equipment) if the lease payments are consumable for a machine. Must be purchased from the Same vendor for at least 5 years till end of lease contract) with a fix price stated in the contract,
can we consider under IFRS 16?
How can we treat that as lessee?
When the 1st lease payment is made, I will debit current lease liability by 1st month lease payment, therefore the current lease liability be will left with 11 months lease payment. After that entry, should I debit non-current lease liability by 13th month lease payment and credit current lease liability with 13th month lease payment? In short, current lease liability will always be 12 months. Is this correct?
Yes, exactly.
Hi Silvia,
As required by IFRS16, lease liability has to be divided into current lease liability and non-current lease liability. If total lease liability is 106,503.63, I recognised 52,082.99 as current lease liability and 54,086.20 as non-current lease liability.
Assuming the company financial year end is 31 December 2019 and the lease starts at 01 Jan 2019, the balance sheet as at 31 December 2019 will have zero balance for current lease liability and the non-current lease liability remains as 54,086.20. Is this correct?
Thank you in advance.
Well, at the year-end you must perform another split. I assume that the balance of 52 082.99 was paid during 2019 and the remaining balance will be paid later, but when? If in 2020, then this portion becomes a current liability at the end of 2019.You will need to split the amount of 54 086.20 again. S.
Yes, this is what I realised just now – do you have such examples in IFRS kit?
Yes, I do 🙂
Hi Sylvie,
If you do the exactly above example with monthly lease payments in excel , the lease liability does not ends to nill at the end of the lease (31/12/2021), is not more accurate to use monthly calculation of the above table? do u know why this does not make 0 at the end?
I mean it is close to zero but not zero, -which indicates that something need to adjusted when calculate monthly?
Yes, of course I do know why it does not make zero at the end. I assume that you applied the wrong rate for calculating your monthly interest. You cannot apply annual rate, or even annual rate divided by 12 – that’s not OK because you have compounding here and it means that in month 1, you need to charge interest also on interest balance from previous month. Also, there will be payments each month changing your rate.
Hello Silvia!
Thank you for a great post, this is so helpful.
I have one question though; what do you mean with “comparative period”? Since 2019 is the current period, what does it mean that 2018 is a “comparative period”?
Thank you so much in advance!
Yes.
Hi Silvia,
Thanks for your explanation and I need your help. I just wonder if rental expense is still recongized in PL ?
Well only if you use the exception and account for the lease as for short-term or low-value – in this case yes, it is in P/L.
Thanks for this analysis. Will the retrospective adjustment to retained earnings be a permanent difference and not deductible for tax?
Secondly, as this adjustment includes full recognition of a dilapidation provision, will this be deductible for tax purposes?
Hi Silvia,
Wonderful explanation, thank you.
I have a question that if Company A has a tenancy agreement with a Landlord. However, the rental payment made by Company A to the Landlord will be claimed to Company B. how it is handle under IFRS 17?
Typo, under IRFS 16
Hi Silvia, with regard to the double entry for the Modified retrospective approach- Restatement of the current period (year 2019):
Debit Lease liability: CU 91 514
Debit Interest (profit or loss of 2019): CU 8 486
Debit Depreciation (profit or loss of 2019): CU 91 594
Credit ROU asset: CU 91 594
Credit Operating lease expenses (profit or loss of 2019): 100 000- Shouldn’t this last line be Credit Bank 100,000 for the amount paid in Year 3?
I guess no, because this entry assumes you have already booked something according to IAS 17 and this is just restatement of what you have booked.
Hi Silvia, thanks for your quick reply- but wouldn’t that line item not need to be restated? As it’s in Yr 3 2019 (which is when IFRS16 become active?)
You are in the current year, so restatement is not applicable. It’s for the previous years.
I believe this entry is not really correct the amount of $100k is much higher than the depreciation which is more or less the lease booked under IAS 17. you will end up with a credit balance in the operating expenses.
It is correct – I explained that this is just reversal of something you have already booked. Please read carefully.
Hi Silvia, very grateful for the work you are doing. was wondering if you can address the impact of ifrs16 on the cash flow statements. where would you record the change for the ROUA and lease liability?
my apologies if you have already addressed it in another area. Thanks in advance.
Hi Silvia,
I have a problem with determining incremental borrowing rate. Could you please help how we can calculate this? Thanks in advance.
Hi Silvia,
You have problem with one point. I know we need to adopt this IFRS at 1.1.2019. But my client has financial year at 31 March 2019 (not 31 December 2019), Please confirm if we can adjust the journal entry at 1 Jan 2019 to April 2019 or not. If yes, please let me know if where the rule say this point. Thank you a lot for your help.
Hi Sarah,
this standard is mandatorily applicable for the periods starting on or after 1 January 2019. It means that if the financial year ended 31 March 2019, it started on 1 April 2018 – isn’t it? In this case, your client can still apply IAS 17 for the full financial year and then apply IFRS 16 starting 1 April 2019. Hope this helps. S.
Thanks A lot Silvia 🙂
Hi Sylvia …tq for the reply…for retrospective application for YE 30th April 2019 – the transition date is 1 May 2017……but its applicable if entity also applies IFRS 15 under early adoption right?
otherwise, the modified approach applies? (in the event that entity did not apply early adaption for IFRS 15
Hi sylvia
If my reporting date is 30th April 2019….so my restrospective date of transition would be 1 May 2017?
And what would be the accounting treatment for tax paid to the City of London?
Hi Margaret, the transition date is 1 May 2017. As for the tax – well, I am not from UK, so I have no idea what the purpose of tax is and what the base of its calculation is – thus I cannot really say. S.
Hello.
I have a question about Full retrospective approach >Journal entry 2. Restatement of the comparative period (year 2018).
The entries for Interest, Depreciation and Operating lease expenses are made in “P/L 2018”. Is this correct?
There is no doubt that the character of the entries is retrospective (they affect/restate the year 2018), but! the booking takes place (in a physical sense) in year 2019. As in the year 2019 the books for 2018 are already closed there is no way the entries could be made in P/L 2018, In my opinion the correct journal entry would be:
> Debit Lease liability: CU 88.849
> Debit Retained earnings in equity : CU 2.745 (Operating lease expenses -100.000 + Interest 11.151 + Depreciation 91.594)
> Credit ROU asset: CU 91.594
Many thanks in advance.
Matt
Hi Matt, yes of course. I intentionally made entries as to “P/L 2018”, because you are applying full approach and you need to show restated numbers for 2018, too – so you must prepare the numbers for 2018 under the new IFRS 16, too and made bookings somehow there (although maybe not in a real time). S.
I thank you for your promt response. I am glad I got the example/entries right. I agree with you that the entries have to be made in a way so that the numberst for 2018 will be restated, although in my opinion it would be wise to add a note in the example that the reference to “P/L 2018” relates only to comparative data – i.e. as the year 2018 is alrealdy closed, the entry (which takes place in 2019) is booked to “Retained earnings in equity”.
Matt
p.s.
I complement you on your articles They helped me a lot in understaning the main/key points of IAS/IFRS.
This is fantastic – thanks
Hi Sylvia, i wanted to know if IFRS 16 applies to a rent agreement on a building for a 2yr period?
i had a building rented in 2018 for office space but i signed a rent agreement for 2 yrs and not a lease agreement.
Yes, it does.
Hi Sylvia,
Thanks for sharing this example – I have a question – the VAT should be included in the NPV of the Credit Lease liability if the company is VAT registerd and if the company is not VAT registered?
Also all the direct expenses, legal fees etc should be included with VAT or not?
Hi Vasilis,
anything that you will get back from your government – do not include. Anything that you will not get back – include. This is a very simple rule, but it works.
Thanks for your reply, one confusing thing more -since Lease Liaiblity and ROU based on cash – this means that if the rent agreement starts 2018 but we only need to start paying 2019, we do not recognise anything in 2018? no need for restatement of opening bal?
many thanks
No, that’s not the case. You need to recognize the lease liability and ROU at the inception of the lease – when the asset is made available to the lessee (in 2018).
Hi Silvia,
A small concern relating to possibility of including VAT payment in the computation of Lease liability and Right of use asset. Can you elaborate on inclusion of VAT to the computation and how it is backed by IFRS 16?
Hi Uvini,
it depends if you can claim VAT back from your tax office or not. If yes, then do not include it in the computation and claim it. If not, then yes, include it. All the best, S.
Hi Silvia
Thank you very much for clear explanation of IFRS16 components. Very much appreciated.
One question:
If we as Lessor has given an asset (a Playground) on lease and the agreement states that we will get the sponsorship benefits only in return (i.e. no cash/bank transaction), I am not sure how will I record Lease Receivables in our books. Could you please provide me some guidance or a clue as to where I should look for answer. If you have a link to an example, would you please be kind enough to share it with me.
What would happen if I paid the rent in advance and at the end of 2018 I had a balance in prepaid rents How would the favorable treatment be when opening entries are made on 1/1/2019
Hi Silvia,
How is it going?
I have a quick question. Say there is a parent company in one country (Canada) and a sub in USA, I want to setup lease Lia and ROU in the books of the Canadian company under IFRS 16 and IAS 21 at transition using the retro approach. What’s the best approach at transition and going forward? Should I setup the sub (lease lia and ROU) using the USA discount rate, and upon consolidation reval the lease Lia as this is a monetary item? How would I treat the depr, Int and ROU? thanks
Hi Silvia,
In your above example, if we were to depreciate for 5 years on a straight line basis but the lease started in the middle of the year, that would leave us with a balance in the ROU asset while the lease liability would become zero at the end of 5 years,
How would the difference in the ROU be accounted for? Would be take the difference to the P&L?
Thanks in advance!
Dear Silvia,
Thanks for the brilliant explanation.
It would be greatly appreciated if you can help us with question below.
We have made accrual for lease payment in previous financial year @ USD 100, 000
(Recorded as below in previous finance report:
Dr P/L (Rental expenses)
Cr B/S (Other payable)
As at 01/01/2019
Lease liability @ PV = USD 1,000,000
ROU @ USD 1,000,000 as per lease liability @ PV
Under modified retrospective approach, i would like to check if the initial recognition below is correct : (WITHOUT touching Retained earning)
Dr ROU USD 900,000 (An amount equal to the lease liability adjusted for accrued lease payments in the statement of financial position directly before the date of initial application)
Dr Other payable USD 100,000 (to reverse)
Cr Lease liabilty USD 1,000,000
wonderful explanation. how can i account for a 1 year auto renovating lease contract, without a maturity date, what would be my approach?
Hi Silvia,
Thanks a lot for an easy to read article.
I want to ask your advice regarding the lease of dedicated logistics warehouse, meaning that the warehouse will be used only for one customer. How should it to be treated. As far as I understood we would have to account this warehouse in our books based on the new rules and our customer will also have to account the warehouse in his books as well due to he will be the only one user. Is that correct or not? It looks like three times the same warehouse will be shown in different companies as an asset. Of course those companies do not consolidate their reporting but still. Not really clear how to treat this case.
Thanks a lot.
Best regards,
Ksenia
Hi Ksenia,
if there is a lease and you are the lessor, and the lease is operating from your point of view, then yes, the lessee will book right-of-use asset and lease liability, plus you keep warehouse in your books. It is asymetric accounting, but that is OK. Please bear in mind that you and your customer do not have the same asset in your books: you have a warehouse and your customer has the right to use that warehouse which is a bit different. All the best, S.
Hi Silvia
Thanks for the brilliant article.
Quick question – what if the lease term for an asset, say vehicle (9 years lease) is longer the useful life of the asset per Company’s policy(7 years max) ? Would we depreciate the ROU per the lease term or per the company’s policy and have no depreciation charge for the last 2 years of the lease term?
Thanks a lot for your response
Prakriti
Hi Silvia!
Great article!
One question:
How do you account for a period that is less than 1 year? Say that the last period in your example is 0,5 years. Then, in my calculations the sum of interest and depreciation does not equal the sum of lease payment. The difference is 1.489. Why is that?
Thanks,
Tor
Dear Silvia,
Thanks a lot for this post and the clarification with an example.
Quick question about the example. Let us assume that ifrs 16 was applied from 2017 on and that the lease concerns a car that gets wrecked in the second year beginning 2018.
In my understanding we will have to:
Reverse the ROI – 457 971
Reverse the ROI depreciation + 91 594
Reverse the remaining lease liability +371 710
The difference is the 5 333 euro. On which account should this be corrected?
Thanks and best regards,
Ruben
Hi Ruben,
I am not sure what you mean by ROI – maybe right of use asset? In general yes, if the lease is finished by wrecking of the car, then you remove the balance sheet carrying amounts and the difference is recognized in profit or loss.
Thanks Silvia, Yes I meant ROU. Sorry for confusing you.
Hi,
What is the entry for the bank payment?
is the below entry correct?
Debit Interest (profit or loss of 2019): CU 8 486
Debit Depreciation (profit or loss of 2019): CU 91 594
Credit Bank 100 000