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!
JOIN OUR FREE NEWSLETTER AND GET
report "Top 7 IFRS Mistakes" + free IFRS mini-course
Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription.
Recent Comments
- Silvia on How to Account for Spare Parts under IFRS
- Silvia on IAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment – summary
- Christos Michael on IAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment – summary
- James Kamau on How to Account for Spare Parts under IFRS
- yannick on How to Account for Government Grants (IAS 20)
Categories
- Accounting Policies and Estimates (14)
- Consolidation and Groups (24)
- Current Assets (21)
- Financial Instruments (55)
- Financial Statements (52)
- Foreign Currency (9)
- IFRS Videos (70)
- Insurance (3)
- Most popular (6)
- Non-current Assets (54)
- Other Topics (15)
- Provisions and Other Liabilities (44)
- Revenue Recognition (26)
- Uncategorized (1)
How to apply IFRS 16 when you have 300+ rental contracts (it’s the case of first time adoption of IFRS 16).
Does the exemption of low value assets apply here? If yes, is there any monetary threshold? Like rental contracts below $5,000 etc.?
In our organization there are lands for which rents were paid 100% in advanced.Lease period is 30 years..Can we recognized fully paid advance as right of use assets and amortized over the period of 30years
Hi Silvia,
Is there any other modified retrospective approach in which we do not take any impact on opening retained earnings and calculate the lease liability and ROU at the date of initial application?
Hi Silvia
What is accounting treatment when the payment are made in mid of the months and at the time of implementation under Option 1, I have a prepaid balance in my books. How do I adjust that. I could not find any guidance under the standard.
Hi Silvia
When doing the journal entry for initial adoption of IFRS 16 is it wrong to Debit ROU asset, Debit Retained earnings, Debit Deferred tax and Credit Lease liability?
I really cannot confirm if it is right or wrong without actually seeing how you arrived to that conclusion.
Many thanks Silvia. This was really helpful
Hi
I have question regarding ifrs 16 leases. In my company we have a rent agreement for 7 years and lock in period for agreement is 2 years. Also security deposit has been made equivalent to 2 month’s rent which is adjustable against rent of last two months of rent agreement whenever it expires or is prematurely closed. I have capitalised this rent agreement for full tenure of 7 years and shown Security deposit under financial assets. Is the treatment correct as per ifrs 16?? In my view security deposit should be shown as non financial asset as it is adjustable?? Further, i am confused about discouting of auch security deposit?? Please help
Well, I did not see the contract, but if the deposit acts in a capacity of 2 last rental payments, then I would disagree with the treatment that you made. Instead, I would consider this deposit as my first payment and I would include zeros in the lease schedule calculation table for the last 2 payments, because that’s what effectively happened. S.
Hi Sylvia. Hope you are well. I have a question. If a company made an agreement of office rent for the next 5-years and within the agreement paid office rent for 2-years(50000 x24) in cash. The company Debit office rent and credit cash for $ 1200000. However, based on IFRS 16 because of 1200000 is the Present value, shall we discount and record the liability only $ 1,800,000(3,000,000-1,200,000). In other words “IFRS 16 considers prepayments or not?”
Hi Sylvia,
Thanks for a wonderful explanation on IFRS16. (1) Would you mind sharing how to determine the discount factor on ROU? (2) How would you determine the value of a ROU asset to bring into your balance sheet.
Thank you,
Hi Sylvia. Hope you are well. I have a question. A company is in a lease agreement with the Government regarding a factory. Company is therefore the lessee. However until 31.12.2018 the Company was using IAS16 and not IAS17 in its books. Now as at 31.12.2019 have to apply IFRS16 and IAS17 retrospectively for its comparative figures (31.12.2018). The Company was stating the asset (factory) in its books at cost hence calculating depreciation every year until a specific year where the Company changed treatment and started accounting the asset at fair value. Rent expense was recognised every year to profit and loss. Now the Company calculated PV of lease payments, made all workings based on IFRS16, however my question is how to account for ROU asset retrospectively and in current year. From my understanding of the IFRS16 ROU asset to be recognised in books is the PV of the lease payments. Can you please help me on this? Thank you.
I think this is a short term lease (not more than 12 month calendar) case, and should be exempted from IFRS 16 treatment.
Hi Silva,
Please, is withholding tax borne by the lessee forms part of the lease value in calculating the Right of Use (ROU) asset. e.g. The annual rent payable is CU70m ; WHT is 10%. Lesse bears the cost of WHT. In effect the lesse incurs a total cost of CU77m as rent expense. Should the lesse capitalise CU70m or CU77m as ROU asset?
BR,
John
Thanks Silvia for the write up. Would IFRS 16 be applicable in this scenario? An entity has a one year contract to use and pay for an office space. The entity renews this contract annually when it receives notice from the property managers to make one year advance payment for the space if it desires to continue with its usage. Therefore, rental payments are prepaid annually at the expiration each rent. Would IFRS 16 be applicable to the entity in this circumstance? The space is specifically identified in the contract and the entity has full control of its use during the one year period.
Regards.
Hi Silvia, in the lease agreement, the lease termination clause is such that it is tied to the head lease. What it means is whenever the lessor receive termination notice from head lessor, then the lessor will give the related notice to us (lessee). My question do I still account for the lease term based on the lease agreement of 10 years?
The stamp duty paid on the lease agreements should not be treated as initial direct cost, is that correct?
Thank you very much Silvia, I will wait for your answers,
hi Silvia,
Can you please answer my pervious 3 questions??
Hi Nasser, yes, if I have time. If you need our urgent help, please refer to our helpline service. Thank you!
If my accounting period start from 31.10.2018 -31.12.2019, do i still have to apply IFRS116?
No. IFRS 16 mandatorily applies for periods starting 1 January 2019 or later.
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.and same what about ths PDC cheques given for rent in my liability side as 31 Dec 2018 and the cheques are due to pay on 2019?
hi
if my lease contact is 12 months, but I know that I will renew it every year for at least 3 years.
so how can I calculate the both liabilities and assets for that?
hi,
I have a long land lease contract for 30 years, but the rent amount not same for each year, after every 5 years the rent is increasing, so how can I calculate the liabilities and the assets for whole contract?
Hello Silvia, Thank you so much for assistance. Please kindly respond to this one. I am now struggling on this one. If my client’s office which the lease term just over one year (1.1.2019 to 31.12.2019) and all the lease payment paid in advance. The lease term is renewable after 31.12.2019 Does it mean the ROU will depreciate itself to zero after 31.12.2019? And if this is not the case, how to I remove it from the financial statements including the financial liability already recognised in the financial position?
Thanks heaps, Silvia.
Hello Silvia!
I was wondering if you can address the impact of IFRS 16 on the cash flow statements. /How do I show the impact of introducing it for the first time. Do i show it as an adjustment by showing the net of ROU and lease liability by year end? or do i show ROU as an addition to my assets and LL in my payable?
Looking forward to your response!!
thanks
Alya
is that mean, for capital portion of 2000 i don’t have to change anything, but for pl portion of 500, need to treat it under IFRS 16, get the pv for the PL portion of 500?
thanks again
No, that is not what I wanted to say. Reverse everything and book it again.
hi Silvia,
before IFRS 16, total rental 2500, out of this 2000 is capitalized in WIP, bal charged to PL.
now how to apply IFRS 16 in this scenario?
thanks.
Well, the only advice for that is – reverse everything and book it as you would have been starting out 🙂 ROU asset should be separately recognized, not as a part of WIP though.
Say the right to use an asset in terms of IFRS 16 has an escalation clause of 5% per year. The asset is leased for 5 years since 2019 (February). How do we incorporate the escalation clause in the amortisation table or just average the total payable for the lease equally
Hi, I’m not clear on how to adjust for accrued rental expenses into IFRS 16. Client has a lease running from January 2018 to December 2020. However, there were no lease payments as at 1 January 2019 and client as at 31 December 2019 accrued for this expense. i.e:
Dr Expenses
Cr Accurals
How do I recognise this as at 1 January 2019?
Hi Sylvia
I have a technicality on a lease.
The original contract ran from 01/03/2018 – 31/10/2019 and therefore met the criteria for IFRS 16, At the end of August 2019, the rental amount was reduced from $12,420 to $ 10,850. Also the contract was extended to run as follows: 01/09/2019 – 30/09/2020 therefore the original contract and extention time periods overlapped. I have dealt with the lease modification due to the reduced rate, however I am confused on the assessment of the extention. As the extention starts before the original contract ends, when do I do the assessment? If I consider the assessment to start on 01/09/2019, then the extention will meet the requirements of IFRS 16. However. if I consider the extention to start on 01/11/2019 when the original contract ends, then the extention does not meet the requirements of IFRS 16.
When do I consider the extention to commence?
Hi RM, if the extension runs from 1/9/2019 with the new reduced rate, then consider this as the date of the lease modification. I assume that the original terms valid for the period 1/9/19 till 30/9/19 (overlapping period) were cancelled by the modification and the new terms apply for that period. S.
Hi Sylvia, Thanks for the article!
Regarding IFRS 16 applicability, could you please tell me that if the lease is in the name of some other party instead of beneficiary/party who is actually using the lease asset, will IFRS 16 will be applicable to beneficiary? If yes, on what basis?
Hi Sylvia. Thanks for the article!
I would like to check with you on one situation: An entity has entered into a contract to dispose of part of it’s operation in 31 December 2018, and that includes the lease arrangement (assuming remaining lease term is 3 years) within the operation. Consequently, the entity classified the disposal group as held for sale in accordance with IFRS 5. In 1 January 2019, is the entity still required to account for the ROU and Lease Liability? The remaining lease term is 3 years, but, the lease arrangement is to be disposed of (novated to the buyer) within 12 months from 31 December 2018 together with the operation. Can the entity apply the short term exemption in this situation?
Many thanks.
Thanks so much.
I have a question, what would be the reason if lease liability is not match with ROU?
Do you mean – at initial recognition? Afterwards it should not match 🙂 Well, there could be some prepayments and other items that enter into the ROU asset, but not into the lease liability, just as an example.
Hello Silvia, I’m truly grateful for the way you breakdown the adoption and effects of the IFRS 16.
However, I have a problem, a clients (a subsidiary of another) holds an equipment belonging to the parent company on rental (lease perhaps). This equipment is hired to customers periodically as requested by the customer. My client does not pay the parent any fixed annual rental; my client only pays the parent amounts accruing daily only when the equipment is put to work for the customer who also pays for daily use. My client had recognised some amount as “right-of-use asset”,
My questions are:
– Does this equipment qualify in the first place as right of use asset?
– What will be the appropriate measurement given that there is not fixed annual rental?
– Again, given that the rental duration is not clearly defined, how would depreciation even be estimated?
I will be grateful for your supports.
Thanks again.
Can we take “decrease in lease liability” as depreciation amount?
No, it is not the same thing.
Hi Silvia,
Beautiful article indeed. I had one question, as regards to the implementation of IFRS 16, would you say it would be necessary for government entities to capitalize leased land as an asset on their balance sheets from the perspective of both the lessee, and the lessors point of view?
Hi Bicab, I am afraid I did not understand the question. As soon as the government entity applies IFRS, then yes, if it is a lessee and it has a lease of land under IFRS 16, then the entity must account for right-of-use asset related to that land (not the land itself). If the entity is a lessor, then it must classify the lease first (and in the case of land, it will mostly be operating unless there is a transfer of ownership at the end of the lease) and then account for it accordingly.S.
Hello Sylvia,
Wonderful article on IFRA 16.
My question is, will there be a difference in the confirmation of audit balances between the lessor and the lessee based on the interest rate implicit not stated in the lease agreement as a result of the lessee using incremental borrowing rate in the determination of the Lease liability.
Regards
Yes, it could be. The lease accounting under IFRS 16 is NOT necessarily symmetric.
Hello
I have a question I was hoping for help with.
I have a lease which in YE 19 will be completely impaired for the asset.
The liability isn’t due to finish till YE 20.
But it is possible in January, the landlord will let the lease finish early, i understand what to do if the landlord wan’t payments for the full liability remaining.
But what if the landlord asks for more in terms of dilapidations that weren’t originally capitalized. Or if they let the lease finish early without charging for the remainder of lease payments.
Hi,
Can I check if there is an error in the Statement of financial position (extract) screenshot for the modified retrospective method calculation portion. It is stated as 8,159 in the screenshot but workings show DR RE of 8,079.
Hi,
Is there anyone here will show me how to compute the maturity of your lease liability? I’m just confuse if I will use the discounted or undiscounted cash flows?
Thank you in advance!
Dear Silvia, thank you for the details above. If a company has a 5 years lease and pays fully for the 5 years lease from the inception with no further obligation in the future. Are we supposed to still apply IFRS 16? even when there is no future lease payments that needs to generate a lease liability and ROU. I look forward to your response. Thank you.
Thanks Silvia
It was well explained. I have a question though. Which Journal(s) do i process for my Landlords invoice (in case of rental lease?). (assuming its debit Rental/Lease Expense and Credit Supplier). Supplier will be offset on bank payment and how about the other leg?
Thanks
Dee
Hi Silvia,
I’ve got most of this in hand. One question for you though. How do I deal with existing lease incentives that are sitting on the balance sheet at date of adoption?
At present the thought was to have the Lease Liability and the ROU equal in value and then reduce the ROU by the value of the existing lease incentive liability. This seems to be in line with paragraphs 22-24 but that is for recognition/measurement of new leases. I can’t find anything definitive on transition rules for this.
Many thanks,
Simon
Hi Silvia,
I have a client paid in advance a 270k for 3 years office rent. Do we discount the amount in this case and book an interest or the ROU is 270k and depreciated over 3 years
Thank you
Amr
Dear Silvia ,
I have one question , if House on rental basis Contract for 1 year with advance payment term. At contract end (i.e after 1 year) both party mutually decide to renew or not , so whether it will be recorded as Lease Asset (from Lessee side)
Hi,
My company has finance leases for various ROU assets. Some of the ROU assets were recently destroyed in a fire, about 2 years before the end of the lease. Therefore how do I treat the remaining balance in the leased liability account? Do I post straight to interest account in the P&L (DEBIT Leases Liability CREDIT Interest on Lease (creating an income balance) or perhaps Profit or Loss on Disposal? The same question for clearing the ROU Asset and Depn accounts? Do I treat it like a disposal?
Thanks
Peter
Hi Peter, I really cannot say. It depends on the settlement with your lessor. If the lessor does not require the repayment of the lease liability (I have doubts here), then yes, it is settled via profit or loss. As for ROU asset – yes, disposal.
Hi Silvia,
A Company has a lease agreement for rental of premise, which will be renewed every 2 years, the latest renewal is for January 2019 till December 2020.
If Modified Retrospective Approach were to be adopted, how should the retained earnings as at 1 January 2019 be adjusted? How far back should we Present Value the lease payments?
Thanks!
Hello,
How to treat tenancy allowance when we have a rent free portion. Could you please share with us some excel examples for better understanding.
Hello,
I have an IFRS 16 issue, whereby X entity provides an operating lease for its land and buildings to entity Y. On the premises of entity X, there are biological assets. X says to Y that only at end of contract period that Y has to ensure there are the same number of biological assets compared to beginning. During contract period liverstock feeds is taken care by . How do we treat this?
Hi Silvia, my company has a tenancy agreement, rental is charged and based on 5% on gross sales. Tenancy term is 3 years. Due to the unknown sales, how can we calculate the Right of Use asset and Lease Liabilities? Please advise.
Hi Anthony, this type of rentals does not fall under into the lease liability because they are excluded – please see this Q&A episode with the similar case. Easy treatment, isn’t it?
Thanks Silvia.
Quick question, what’s the impact for both the sub-lessee and bub-lessor under a sub-lease?
Thanks Silvia, this is excellent article. Concept of lease payments is cleared to me perfectly. Appreciated!