8box Solutions Inc.

4_20230710_150500_0001

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Email: sales@8box.solutions

IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers

Table of Contents

Revenue from Contracts with Customers


In April 2001 the International Accounting Standards Board (Board) adopted
IAS 11 Construction Contracts and IAS 18 Revenue, both of which had originally been issued
by the International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC) in December 1993. IAS 18
replaced a previous version: Revenue Recognition (issued in December 1982). IAS 11 replaced
parts of IAS 11 Accounting for Construction Contracts (issued in March 1979).
In December 2001 the Board issued SIC-31 Revenue—Barter Transactions Involving Advertising
Services. The Interpretation was originally developed by the Standards Interpretations
Committee of the IASC to determine the circumstances in which a seller of advertising
services can reliably measure revenue at the fair value of advertising services provided in
a barter transaction.
In June 2007 the Board issued IFRIC 13 Customer Loyalty Programmes. The Interpretation
was developed by the IFRS Interpretations Committee (the ‘Interpretations Committee’)
to address the accounting by the entity that grants award credits to its customers.
In July 2008 the Board issued IFRIC 15 Agreements for the Construction of Real Estate. The
Interpretation was developed by the Interpretations Committee to apply to the
accounting for revenue and associated expenses by entities that undertake the
construction of real estate directly or through subcontractors.
In January 2009 the Board issued IFRIC 18 Transfers of Assets from Customers. The
Interpretation was developed by the Interpretations Committee to apply to the
accounting for transfers of items of property, plant and equipment by entities that
receive such transfers from their customers.
In May 2014 the Board issued IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers, together with
the introduction of Topic 606 into the Financial Accounting Standards Board’s Accounting
Standards Codification®. IFRS 15 replaces IAS 11, IAS 18, IFRIC 13, IFRIC 15, IFRIC 18 and
SIC-31. IFRS 15 provides a comprehensive framework for recognising revenue from
contracts with customers.
In September 2015 the Board issued Effective Date of IFRS 15 which deferred the mandatory
effective date of IFRS 15 to 1 January 2018.
In April 2016 the Board issued Clarifications to IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with
Customers clarifying the Board’s intentions when developing some of the requirements
in IFRS 15. These amendments do not change the underlying principles of IFRS 15 but
clarify how those principles should be applied and provide additional transitional relief.
In May 2017, the Board issued IFRS 17 Insurance Contracts which permits an entity to
choose whether to apply IFRS 17 or IFRS 15 to specified fixed-fee service contracts that
meet the definition of an insurance contract.
Other Standards have made minor consequential amendments to IFRS 15, including
IFRS 16 Leases (issued January 2016) and Amendments to References to the Conceptual
Framework in IFRS Standards (issued March 2018).

International Financial Reporting Standard 15 Revenue from Contracts with
Customers (IFRS 15) is set out in paragraphs 1–129 and Appendices A–D. All the
paragraphs have equal authority. Paragraphs in bold type state the main principles.
Terms defined in Appendix A are in italics the first time that they appear in the
Standard. Definitions of other terms are given in the Glossary for International
Financial Reporting Standards. The Standard should be read in the context of its
objective and the Basis for Conclusions, the Preface to IFRS Standards and the Conceptual
Framework for Financial Reporting. IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates
and Errors provides a basis for selecting and applying accounting policies in the absence
of explicit guidance.

 

International Financial Reporting Standard 15
Revenue from Contracts with Customers

Objective


The objective of this Standard is to establish the principles that an entity
shall apply to report useful information to users of financial statements
about the nature, amount, timing and uncertainty of revenue and cash
flows arising from a contract with a customer.

Meeting the objective


To meet the objective in paragraph 1, the core principle of this Standard is
that an entity shall recognise revenue to depict the transfer of promised goods
or services to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which
the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods or services.
An entity shall consider the terms of the contract and all relevant facts and
circumstances when applying this Standard. An entity shall apply this
Standard, including the use of any practical expedients, consistently to
contracts with similar characteristics and in similar circumstances.
This Standard specifies the accounting for an individual contract with
a customer. However, as a practical expedient, an entity may apply this
Standard to a portfolio of contracts (or performance obligations) with similar
characteristics if the entity reasonably expects that the effects on the financial
statements of applying this Standard to the portfolio would not differ
materially from applying this Standard to the individual contracts (or
performance obligations) within that portfolio. When accounting for a
portfolio, an entity shall use estimates and assumptions that reflect the size
and composition of the portfolio.

Scope


An entity shall apply this Standard to all contracts with customers, except the
following:
(a) lease contracts within the scope of IFRS 16 Leases;
(b) contracts within the scope of IFRS 17 Insurance Contracts. However, an
entity may choose to apply this Standard to insurance contracts that
have as their primary purpose the provision of services for a fixed fee
in accordance with paragraph 8 of IFRS 17;
(c) financial instruments and other contractual rights or obligations
within the scope of IFRS 9 Financial Instruments, IFRS 10 Consolidated
Financial Statements, IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements, IAS 27 Separate Financial
Statements and IAS 28 Investments in Associates and Joint Ventures; and

(d) non-monetary exchanges between entities in the same line of business
to facilitate sales to customers or potential customers. For example,
this Standard would not apply to a contract between two oil companies
that agree to an exchange of oil to fulfil demand from their customers
in different specified locations on a timely basis.
An entity shall apply this Standard to a contract (other than a contract listed
in paragraph 5) only if the counterparty to the contract is a customer. A
customer is a party that has contracted with an entity to obtain goods or
services that are an output of the entity’s ordinary activities in exchange for
consideration. A counterparty to the contract would not be a customer if, for
example, the counterparty has contracted with the entity to participate in an
activity or process in which the parties to the contract share in the risks and
benefits that result from the activity or process (such as developing an asset in
a collaboration arrangement) rather than to obtain the output of the entity’s
ordinary activities.
A contract with a customer may be partially within the scope of this Standard
and partially within the scope of other Standards listed in paragraph 5.
(a) If the other Standards specify how to separate and/or initially measure
one or more parts of the contract, then an entity shall first apply the
separation and/or measurement requirements in those Standards. An
entity shall exclude from the transaction price the amount of the part
(or parts) of the contract that are initially measured in accordance with
other Standards and shall apply paragraphs 73–86 to allocate the
amount of the transaction price that remains (if any) to
each performance obligation within the scope of this Standard and to
any other parts of the contract identified by paragraph 7(b).
(b) If the other Standards do not specify how to separate and/or initially
measure one or more parts of the contract, then the entity shall apply
this Standard to separate and/or initially measure the part (or parts) of
the contract.
This Standard specifies the accounting for the incremental costs of obtaining a
contract with a customer and for the costs incurred to fulfil a contract with a
customer if those costs are not within the scope of another Standard (see
paragraphs 91–104). An entity shall apply those paragraphs only to the costs
incurred that relate to a contract with a customer (or part of that contract)
that is within the scope of this Standard.

Recognition


Identifying the contract


An entity shall account for a contract with a customer that is within the
scope of this Standard only when all of the following criteria are met:
(a) the parties to the contract have approved the contract (in writing,
orally or in accordance with other customary business practices)
and are committed to perform their respective obligations;

(b) the entity can identify each party’s rights regarding the goods or
services to be transferred;
(c) the entity can identify the payment terms for the goods or services
to be transferred;
(d) the contract has commercial substance (ie the risk, timing or
amount of the entity’s future cash flows is expected to change as a
result of the contract); and
(e) it is probable that the entity will collect the consideration to which
it will be entitled in exchange for the goods or services that will be
transferred to the customer. In evaluating whether collectability of
an amount of consideration is probable, an entity shall consider
only the customer’s ability and intention to pay that amount of
consideration when it is due. The amount of consideration to which
the entity will be entitled may be less than the price stated in the
contract if the consideration is variable because the entity may offer
the customer a price concession (see paragraph 52).
A contract is an agreement between two or more parties that creates
enforceable rights and obligations. Enforceability of the rights and obligations
in a contract is a matter of law. Contracts can be written, oral or implied by an
entity’s customary business practices. The practices and processes for
establishing contracts with customers vary across legal jurisdictions,
industries and entities. In addition, they may vary within an entity (for
example, they may depend on the class of customer or the nature of the
promised goods or services). An entity shall consider those practices and
processes in determining whether and when an agreement with a customer
creates enforceable rights and obligations.
Some contracts with customers may have no fixed duration and can be
terminated or modified by either party at any time. Other contracts may
automatically renew on a periodic basis that is specified in the contract. An
entity shall apply this Standard to the duration of the contract (ie the
contractual period) in which the parties to the contract have present
enforceable rights and obligations.
For the purpose of applying this Standard, a contract does not exist if each
party to the contract has the unilateral enforceable right to terminate a
wholly unperformed contract without compensating the other party (or
parties). A contract is wholly unperformed if both of the following criteria are
met:
(a) the entity has not yet transferred any promised goods or services to the
customer; and
(b) the entity has not yet received, and is not yet entitled to receive, any
consideration in exchange for promised goods or services.

If a contract with a customer meets the criteria in paragraph 9 at contract
inception, an entity shall not reassess those criteria unless there is an
indication of a significant change in facts and circumstances. For example, if a
customer’s ability to pay the consideration deteriorates significantly, an entity
would reassess whether it is probable that the entity will collect the
consideration to which the entity will be entitled in exchange for the
remaining goods or services that will be transferred to the customer.
If a contract with a customer does not meet the criteria in paragraph 9, an
entity shall continue to assess the contract to determine whether the criteria
in paragraph 9 are subsequently met.
When a contract with a customer does not meet the criteria
in paragraph 9 and an entity receives consideration from the customer, the
entity shall recognise the consideration received as revenue only when either
of the following events has occurred:
(a) the entity has no remaining obligations to transfer goods or services to
the customer and all, or substantially all, of the consideration

promised by the customer has been received by the entity and is non-
refundable; or

(b) the contract has been terminated and the consideration received from
the customer is non-refundable.
An entity shall recognise the consideration received from a customer as a
liability until one of the events in paragraph 15 occurs or until the criteria in
paragraph 9 are subsequently met (see paragraph 14). Depending on the facts
and circumstances relating to the contract, the liability recognised represents
the entity’s obligation to either transfer goods or services in the future or
refund the consideration received. In either case, the liability shall be
measured at the amount of consideration received from the customer.

Combination of contracts


An entity shall combine two or more contracts entered into at or near the
same time with the same customer (or related parties of the customer) and
account for the contracts as a single contract if one or more of the following
criteria are met:
(a) the contracts are negotiated as a package with a single commercial
objective;
(b) the amount of consideration to be paid in one contract depends on the
price or performance of the other contract; or
(c) the goods or services promised in the contracts (or some goods or
services promised in each of the contracts) are a single performance
obligation in accordance with paragraphs 22–30.

Contract modifications


A contract modification is a change in the scope or price (or both) of a contract
that is approved by the parties to the contract. In some industries and
jurisdictions, a contract modification may be described as a change order, a
variation or an amendment. A contract modification exists when the parties
to a contract approve a modification that either creates new or changes
existing enforceable rights and obligations of the parties to the contract. A
contract modification could be approved in writing, by oral agreement or
implied by customary business practices. If the parties to the contract have
not approved a contract modification, an entity shall continue to apply this
Standard to the existing contract until the contract modification is approved.
A contract modification may exist even though the parties to the contract
have a dispute about the scope or price (or both) of the modification or the
parties have approved a change in the scope of the contract but have not yet
determined the corresponding change in price. In determining whether the
rights and obligations that are created or changed by a modification are
enforceable, an entity shall consider all relevant facts and circumstances
including the terms of the contract and other evidence. If the parties to a
contract have approved a change in the scope of the contract but have not yet
determined the corresponding change in price, an entity shall estimate the
change to the transaction price arising from the modification in accordance
with paragraphs 50–54 on estimating variable consideration
and paragraphs 56–58 on constraining estimates of variable consideration.
An entity shall account for a contract modification as a separate contract if
both of the following conditions are present:
(a) the scope of the contract increases because of the addition of promised
goods or services that are distinct (in accordance with
paragraphs 26–30); and
(b) the price of the contract increases by an amount of consideration that
reflects the entity’s stand-alone selling prices of the additional promised
goods or services and any appropriate adjustments to that price to
reflect the circumstances of the particular contract. For example, an
entity may adjust the stand-alone selling price of an additional good or
service for a discount that the customer receives, because it is not
necessary for the entity to incur the selling-related costs that it would
incur when selling a similar good or service to a new customer.
If a contract modification is not accounted for as a separate contract in
accordance with paragraph 20, an entity shall account for the promised goods
or services not yet transferred at the date of the contract modification (ie the
remaining promised goods or services) in whichever of the following ways is
applicable:
(a) An entity shall account for the contract modification as if it were a
termination of the existing contract and the creation of a new
contract, if the remaining goods or services are distinct from the goods
or services transferred on or before the date of the contract

modification. The amount of consideration to be allocated to the
remaining performance obligations (or to the remaining distinct goods
or services in a single performance obligation identified in accordance
with paragraph 22(b)) is the sum of:
(i) the consideration promised by the customer (including
amounts already received from the customer) that was included
in the estimate of the transaction price and that had not been
recognised as revenue; and
(ii) the consideration promised as part of the contract
modification.

(b) An entity shall account for the contract modification as if it were a
part of the existing contract if the remaining goods or services are not
distinct and, therefore, form part of a single performance
obligation that is partially satisfied at the date of the contract
modification. The effect that the contract modification has on
the transaction price, and on the entity’s measure of progress towards
complete satisfaction of the performance obligation, is recognised as
an adjustment to revenue (either as an increase in or a reduction of
revenue) at the date of the contract modification (ie the adjustment to
revenue is made on a cumulative catch-up basis).
(c) If the remaining goods or services are a combination of items (a) and
(b), then the entity shall account for the effects of the modification on
the unsatisfied (including partially unsatisfied) performance
obligations in the modified contract in a manner that is consistent
with the objectives of this paragraph.

Identifying performance obligations


At contract inception, an entity shall assess the goods or services promised
in a contract with a customer and shall identify as a performance
obligation each promise to transfer to the customer either:
(a) a good or service (or a bundle of goods or services) that is distinct;
or
(b) a series of distinct goods or services that are substantially the same
and that have the same pattern of transfer to the customer (see
paragraph 23).
A series of distinct goods or services has the same pattern of transfer to
the customer if both of the following criteria are met:
(a) each distinct good or service in the series that the entity promises to
transfer to the customer would meet the criteria in paragraph 35 to be
a performance obligation satisfied over time; and
(b) in accordance with paragraphs 39–40, the same method would be used
to measure the entity’s progress towards complete satisfaction of the
performance obligation to transfer each distinct good or service in the
series to the customer.

Promises in contracts with customers


A contract with a customer generally explicitly states the goods or services
that an entity promises to transfer to a customer. However, the performance
obligations identified in a contract with a customer may not be limited to the
goods or services that are explicitly stated in that contract. This is because a
contract with a customer may also include promises that are implied by an
entity’s customary business practices, published policies or specific statements
if, at the time of entering into the contract, those promises create a valid
expectation of the customer that the entity will transfer a good or service to
the customer.
Performance obligations do not include activities that an entity must
undertake to fulfil a contract unless those activities transfer a good or service
to a customer. For example, a services provider may need to perform various
administrative tasks to set up a contract. The performance of those tasks does
not transfer a service to the customer as the tasks are performed. Therefore,
those setup activities are not a performance obligation.

Distinct goods or services


Depending on the contract, promised goods or services may include, but are
not limited to, the following:
(a) sale of goods produced by an entity (for example, inventory of a
manufacturer);
(b) resale of goods purchased by an entity (for example, merchandise of a
retailer);
(c) resale of rights to goods or services purchased by an entity (for
example, a ticket resold by an entity acting as a principal, as described
in paragraphs B34–B38);
(d) performing a contractually agreed-upon task (or tasks) for a customer;
(e) providing a service of standing ready to provide goods or services (for

example, unspecified updates to software that are provided on a when-
and-if-available basis) or of making goods or services available for a

customer to use as and when the customer decides;
(f) providing a service of arranging for another party to transfer goods or
services to a customer (for example, acting as an agent of another
party, as described in paragraphs B34–B38);
(g) granting rights to goods or services to be provided in the future that a
customer can resell or provide to its customer (for example, an entity
selling a product to a retailer promises to transfer an additional good
or service to an individual who purchases the product from the
retailer);
(h) constructing, manufacturing or developing an asset on behalf of a
customer;
(i) granting licences (see paragraphs B52–B63B); and

(j) granting options to purchase additional goods or services (when those
options provide a customer with a material right, as described in
paragraphs B39–B43).
A good or service that is promised to a customer is distinct if both of the
following criteria are met:
(a) the customer can benefit from the good or service either on its own or
together with other resources that are readily available to the
customer (ie the good or service is capable of being distinct); and
(b) the entity’s promise to transfer the good or service to the customer is
separately identifiable from other promises in the contract (ie the
promise to transfer the good or service is distinct within the context of
the contract).
A customer can benefit from a good or service in accordance with
paragraph 27(a) if the good or service could be used, consumed, sold for an
amount that is greater than scrap value or otherwise held in a way that
generates economic benefits. For some goods or services, a customer may be
able to benefit from a good or service on its own. For other goods or services, a
customer may be able to benefit from the good or service only in conjunction
with other readily available resources. A readily available resource is a good or
service that is sold separately (by the entity or another entity) or a resource
that the customer has already obtained from the entity (including goods or
services that the entity will have already transferred to the customer under
the contract) or from other transactions or events. Various factors may
provide evidence that the customer can benefit from a good or service either
on its own or in conjunction with other readily available resources. For
example, the fact that the entity regularly sells a good or service separately
would indicate that a customer can benefit from the good or service on its
own or with other readily available resources.
In assessing whether an entity’s promises to transfer goods or services to the
customer are separately identifiable in accordance with paragraph 27(b), the
objective is to determine whether the nature of the promise, within the
context of the contract, is to transfer each of those goods or services
individually or, instead, to transfer a combined item or items to which the
promised goods or services are inputs. Factors that indicate that two or more
promises to transfer goods or services to a customer are not separately
identifiable include, but are not limited to, the following:
(a) the entity provides a significant service of integrating the goods or
services with other goods or services promised in the contract into a
bundle of goods or services that represent the combined output or
outputs for which the customer has contracted. In other words, the
entity is using the goods or services as inputs to produce or deliver the
combined output or outputs specified by the customer. A combined
output or outputs might include more than one phase, element or
unit.

(b) one or more of the goods or services significantly modifies or
customises, or are significantly modified or customised by, one or
more of the other goods or services promised in the contract.
(c) the goods or services are highly interdependent or highly interrelated.
In other words, each of the goods or services is significantly affected by
one or more of the other goods or services in the contract. For
example, in some cases, two or more goods or services are significantly
affected by each other because the entity would not be able to fulfil its
promise by transferring each of the goods or services independently.
If a promised good or service is not distinct, an entity shall combine that good
or service with other promised goods or services until it identifies a bundle of
goods or services that is distinct. In some cases, that would result in the entity
accounting for all the goods or services promised in a contract as a
single performance obligation.

Satisfaction of performance obligations


An entity shall recognise revenue when (or as) the entity satisfies a
performance obligation by transferring a promised good or service (ie an
asset) to a customer. An asset is transferred when (or as) the customer
obtains control of that asset.
For each performance obligation identified in accordance with
paragraphs 22–30, an entity shall determine at contract inception whether it
satisfies the performance obligation over time (in accordance with
paragraphs 35–37) or satisfies the performance obligation at a point in time
(in accordance with paragraph 38). If an entity does not satisfy a performance
obligation over time, the performance obligation is satisfied at a point in time.
Goods and services are assets, even if only momentarily, when they are
received and used (as in the case of many services). Control of an asset refers
to the ability to direct the use of, and obtain substantially all of the remaining
benefits from, the asset. Control includes the ability to prevent other entities
from directing the use of, and obtaining the benefits from, an asset. The
benefits of an asset are the potential cash flows (inflows or savings in
outflows) that can be obtained directly or indirectly in many ways, such as by:
(a) using the asset to produce goods or provide services (including public
services);
(b) using the asset to enhance the value of other assets;
(c) using the asset to settle liabilities or reduce expenses;
(d) selling or exchanging the asset;
(e) pledging the asset to secure a loan; and
(f) holding the asset.
When evaluating whether a customer obtains control of an asset, an entity
shall consider any agreement to repurchase the asset (see paragraphs
B64–B76).

Performance obligations satisfied over time


An entity transfers control of a good or service over time and, therefore,
satisfies a performance obligation and recognises revenue over time, if one of
the following criteria is met:
(a) the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefits
provided by the entity’s performance as the entity performs (see
paragraphs B3–B4);
(b) the entity’s performance creates or enhances an asset (for example,
work in progress) that the customer controls as the asset is created or
enhanced (see paragraph B5); or
(c) the entity’s performance does not create an asset with an alternative
use to the entity (see paragraph 36) and the entity has an enforceable
right to payment for performance completed to date (see
paragraph 37).
An asset created by an entity’s performance does not have an alternative use
to an entity if the entity is either restricted contractually from readily
directing the asset for another use during the creation or enhancement of that
asset or limited practically from readily directing the asset in its completed
state for another use. The assessment of whether an asset has an alternative
use to the entity is made at contract inception. After contract inception, an
entity shall not update the assessment of the alternative use of an asset unless
the parties to the contract approve a contract modification that substantively
changes the performance obligation. Paragraphs B6–B8 provide guidance for
assessing whether an asset has an alternative use to an entity.
An entity shall consider the terms of the contract, as well as any laws that
apply to the contract, when evaluating whether it has an enforceable right to
payment for performance completed to date in accordance with
paragraph 35(c). The right to payment for performance completed to date does
not need to be for a fixed amount. However, at all times throughout the
duration of the contract, the entity must be entitled to an amount that at least
compensates the entity for performance completed to date if the contract is
terminated by the customer or another party for reasons other than the
entity’s failure to perform as promised. Paragraphs B9–B13 provide guidance
for assessing the existence and enforceability of a right to payment and
whether an entity’s right to payment would entitle the entity to be paid for its
performance completed to date.

Performance obligations satisfied at a point in time


If a performance obligation is not satisfied over time in accordance with
paragraphs 35–37, an entity satisfies the performance obligation at a point in
time. To determine the point in time at which a customer obtains control of a
promised asset and the entity satisfies a performance obligation, the entity
shall consider the requirements for control in paragraphs 31–34. In addition,
an entity shall consider indicators of the transfer of control, which include,
but are not limited to, the following:

(a) The entity has a present right to payment for the asset—if a customer
is presently obliged to pay for an asset, then that may indicate that the
customer has obtained the ability to direct the use of, and obtain
substantially all of the remaining benefits from, the asset in exchange.
(b) The customer has legal title to the asset—legal title may indicate
which party to a contract has the ability to direct the use of, and
obtain substantially all of the remaining benefits from, an asset or to
restrict the access of other entities to those benefits. Therefore, the
transfer of legal title of an asset may indicate that the customer has
obtained control of the asset. If an entity retains legal title solely as
protection against the customer’s failure to pay, those rights of the
entity would not preclude the customer from obtaining control of an
asset.
(c) The entity has transferred physical possession of the asset—the
customer’s physical possession of an asset may indicate that the
customer has the ability to direct the use of, and obtain substantially
all of the remaining benefits from, the asset or to restrict the access of
other entities to those benefits. However, physical possession may not
coincide with control of an asset. For example, in some repurchase
agreements and in some consignment arrangements, a customer or
consignee may have physical possession of an asset that the entity
controls. Conversely, in some bill-and-hold arrangements, the entity
may have physical possession of an asset that the customer controls.
Paragraphs B64–B76, B77–B78 and B79–B82 provide guidance on
accounting for repurchase agreements, consignment arrangements
and bill-and-hold arrangements, respectively.
(d) The customer has the significant risks and rewards of ownership of the
asset—the transfer of the significant risks and rewards of ownership of
an asset to the customer may indicate that the customer has obtained
the ability to direct the use of, and obtain substantially all of the
remaining benefits from, the asset. However, when evaluating the
risks and rewards of ownership of a promised asset, an entity shall
exclude any risks that give rise to a separate performance obligation in
addition to the performance obligation to transfer the asset. For
example, an entity may have transferred control of an asset to a
customer but not yet satisfied an additional performance obligation to
provide maintenance services related to the transferred asset.
(e) The customer has accepted the asset—the customer’s acceptance of an
asset may indicate that it has obtained the ability to direct the use of,
and obtain substantially all of the remaining benefits from, the asset.
To evaluate the effect of a contractual customer acceptance clause on
when control of an asset is transferred, an entity shall consider the
guidance in paragraphs B83–B86.

Measuring progress towards complete satisfaction of a
performance obligation


For each performance obligation satisfied over time in accordance with
paragraphs 35–37, an entity shall recognise revenue over time by measuring
the progress towards complete satisfaction of that performance obligation.
The objective when measuring progress is to depict an entity’s performance in
transferring control of goods or services promised to a customer (ie the
satisfaction of an entity’s performance obligation).
An entity shall apply a single method of measuring progress for each
performance obligation satisfied over time and the entity shall apply that
method consistently to similar performance obligations and in similar
circumstances. At the end of each reporting period, an entity shall remeasure
its progress towards complete satisfaction of a performance obligation
satisfied over time.
Methods for measuring progress
Appropriate methods of measuring progress include output methods and
input methods. Paragraphs B14–B19 provide guidance for using output
methods and input methods to measure an entity’s progress towards complete
satisfaction of a performance obligation. In determining the appropriate
method for measuring progress, an entity shall consider the nature of the
good or service that the entity promised to transfer to the customer.
When applying a method for measuring progress, an entity shall exclude from
the measure of progress any goods or services for which the entity does not
transfer control to a customer. Conversely, an entity shall include in the
measure of progress any goods or services for which the entity does transfer
control to a customer when satisfying that performance obligation.
As circumstances change over time, an entity shall update its measure of
progress to reflect any changes in the outcome of the performance obligation.
Such changes to an entity’s measure of progress shall be accounted for as a
change in accounting estimate in accordance with IAS 8 Accounting Policies,
Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors.

Reasonable measures of progress


An entity shall recognise revenue for a performance obligation satisfied over
time only if the entity can reasonably measure its progress towards complete
satisfaction of the performance obligation. An entity would not be able to
reasonably measure its progress towards complete satisfaction of a
performance obligation if it lacks reliable information that would be required
to apply an appropriate method of measuring progress.
In some circumstances (for example, in the early stages of a contract), an
entity may not be able to reasonably measure the outcome of a performance
obligation, but the entity expects to recover the costs incurred in satisfying
the performance obligation. In those circumstances, the entity shall recognise
revenue only to the extent of the costs incurred until such time that it can
reasonably measure the outcome of the performance obligation.

Measurement


When (or as) a performance obligation is satisfied, an entity shall recognise
as revenue the amount of the transaction price (which excludes estimates
of variable consideration that are constrained in accordance with
paragraphs 56–58) that is allocated to that performance obligation.

Determining the transaction price


An entity shall consider the terms of the contract and its customary
business practices to determine the transaction price. The transaction
price is the amount of consideration to which an entity expects to be
entitled in exchange for transferring promised goods or services to
a customer, excluding amounts collected on behalf of third parties (for
example, some sales taxes). The consideration promised in a contract with a
customer may include fixed amounts, variable amounts, or both.
The nature, timing and amount of consideration promised by a customer
affect the estimate of the transaction price. When determining the
transaction price, an entity shall consider the effects of all of the following:
(a) variable consideration (see paragraphs 50–55 and 59);
(b) constraining estimates of variable consideration (see paragraphs
56–58);
(c) the existence of a significant financing component in the contract (see
paragraphs 60–65);
(d) non-cash consideration (see paragraphs 66–69); and
(e) consideration payable to a customer (see paragraphs 70–72).
For the purpose of determining the transaction price, an entity shall assume
that the goods or services will be transferred to the customer as promised in
accordance with the existing contract and that the contract will not be
cancelled, renewed or modified.

Variable consideration


If the consideration promised in a contract includes a variable amount, an
entity shall estimate the amount of consideration to which the entity will be
entitled in exchange for transferring the promised goods or services to a
customer.
An amount of consideration can vary because of discounts, rebates, refunds,
credits, price concessions, incentives, performance bonuses, penalties or other
similar items. The promised consideration can also vary if an entity’s

entitlement to the consideration is contingent on the occurrence or non-
occurrence of a future event. For example, an amount of consideration would

be variable if either a product was sold with a right of return or a fixed
amount is promised as a performance bonus on achievement of a specified
milestone.

The variability relating to the consideration promised by a customer may be
explicitly stated in the contract. In addition to the terms of the contract, the
promised consideration is variable if either of the following circumstances
exists:
(a) the customer has a valid expectation arising from an entity’s
customary business practices, published policies or specific statements
that the entity will accept an amount of consideration that is less than
the price stated in the contract. That is, it is expected that the entity
will offer a price concession. Depending on the jurisdiction, industry or
customer this offer may be referred to as a discount, rebate, refund or
credit.
(b) other facts and circumstances indicate that the entity’s intention,
when entering into the contract with the customer, is to offer a price
concession to the customer.
An entity shall estimate an amount of variable consideration by using either
of the following methods, depending on which method the entity expects to
better predict the amount of consideration to which it will be entitled:

(a) The expected value—the expected value is the sum of probability-
weighted amounts in a range of possible consideration amounts. An

expected value may be an appropriate estimate of the amount of
variable consideration if an entity has a large number of contracts with
similar characteristics.
(b) The most likely amount—the most likely amount is the single most
likely amount in a range of possible consideration amounts (ie the
single most likely outcome of the contract). The most likely amount
may be an appropriate estimate of the amount of variable
consideration if the contract has only two possible outcomes (for
example, an entity either achieves a performance bonus or does not).
An entity shall apply one method consistently throughout the contract when
estimating the effect of an uncertainty on an amount of variable consideration
to which the entity will be entitled. In addition, an entity shall consider all the
information (historical, current and forecast) that is reasonably available to
the entity and shall identify a reasonable number of possible consideration
amounts. The information that an entity uses to estimate the amount of
variable consideration would typically be similar to the information that the
entity’s management uses during the bid-and-proposal process and in
establishing prices for promised goods or services.

Refund liabilities


An entity shall recognise a refund liability if the entity receives consideration
from a customer and expects to refund some or all of that consideration to the
customer. A refund liability is measured at the amount of consideration
received (or receivable) for which the entity does not expect to be entitled
(ie amounts not included in the transaction price). The refund liability (and
corresponding change in the transaction price and, therefore, the contract
liability) shall be updated at the end of each reporting period for changes in circumstances. To account for a refund liability relating to a sale with a right
of return, an entity shall apply the guidance in paragraphs B20–B27.
Constraining estimates of variable consideration
An entity shall include in the transaction price some or all of an amount of
variable consideration estimated in accordance with paragraph 53 only to the
extent that it is highly probable that a significant reversal in the amount of
cumulative revenue recognised will not occur when the uncertainty associated
with the variable consideration is subsequently resolved.
In assessing whether it is highly probable that a significant reversal in the
amount of cumulative revenue recognised will not occur once the uncertainty
related to the variable consideration is subsequently resolved, an entity shall
consider both the likelihood and the magnitude of the revenue reversal.
Factors that could increase the likelihood or the magnitude of a revenue
reversal include, but are not limited to, any of the following:
(a) the amount of consideration is highly susceptible to factors outside the
entity’s influence. Those factors may include volatility in a market, the
judgement or actions of third parties, weather conditions and a high
risk of obsolescence of the promised good or service.
(b) the uncertainty about the amount of consideration is not expected to
be resolved for a long period of time.
(c) the entity’s experience (or other evidence) with similar types of
contracts is limited, or that experience (or other evidence) has limited
predictive value.
(d) the entity has a practice of either offering a broad range of price
concessions or changing the payment terms and conditions of similar
contracts in similar circumstances.
(e) the contract has a large number and broad range of possible
consideration amounts.
An entity shall apply paragraph B63 to account for consideration in the form
of a sales-based or usage-based royalty that is promised in exchange for a
licence of intellectual property.
Reassessment of variable consideration
At the end of each reporting period, an entity shall update the estimated
transaction price (including updating its assessment of whether an estimate of
variable consideration is constrained) to represent faithfully the
circumstances present at the end of the reporting period and the changes in
circumstances during the reporting period. The entity shall account for
changes in the transaction price in accordance with paragraphs 87–90.

The existence of a significant financing component in the contract


In determining the transaction price, an entity shall adjust the promised
amount of consideration for the effects of the time value of money if the
timing of payments agreed to by the parties to the contract (either explicitly
or implicitly) provides the customer or the entity with a significant benefit of
financing the transfer of goods or services to the customer. In those
circumstances, the contract contains a significant financing component. A
significant financing component may exist regardless of whether the promise
of financing is explicitly stated in the contract or implied by the payment
terms agreed to by the parties to the contract.
The objective when adjusting the promised amount of consideration for a
significant financing component is for an entity to recognise revenue at an
amount that reflects the price that a customer would have paid for the
promised goods or services if the customer had paid cash for those goods or
services when (or as) they transfer to the customer (ie the cash selling price).
An entity shall consider all relevant facts and circumstances in assessing
whether a contract contains a financing component and whether that
financing component is significant to the contract, including both of the
following:
(a) the difference, if any, between the amount of promised consideration
and the cash selling price of the promised goods or services; and
(b) the combined effect of both of the following:
(i) the expected length of time between when the entity transfers
the promised goods or services to the customer and when the
customer pays for those goods or services; and
(ii) the prevailing interest rates in the relevant market.
Notwithstanding the assessment in paragraph 61, a contract with a customer
would not have a significant financing component if any of the following
factors exist:
(a) the customer paid for the goods or services in advance and the timing
of the transfer of those goods or services is at the discretion of the
customer.
(b) a substantial amount of the consideration promised by the customer is
variable and the amount or timing of that consideration varies on the
basis of the occurrence or non-occurrence of a future event that is not
substantially within the control of the customer or the entity (for
example, if the consideration is a sales-based royalty).
(c) the difference between the promised consideration and the cash selling
price of the good or service (as described in paragraph 61) arises for
reasons other than the provision of finance to either the customer or
the entity, and the difference between those amounts is proportional
to the reason for the difference. For example, the payment terms
might provide the entity or the customer with protection from the other party failing to adequately complete some or all of its obligations
under the contract.
As a practical expedient, an entity need not adjust the promised amount of
consideration for the effects of a significant financing component if the entity
expects, at contract inception, that the period between when the entity
transfers a promised good or service to a customer and when the customer
pays for that good or service will be one year or less.
To meet the objective in paragraph 61 when adjusting the promised amount
of consideration for a significant financing component, an entity shall use the
discount rate that would be reflected in a separate financing transaction
between the entity and its customer at contract inception. That rate would
reflect the credit characteristics of the party receiving financing in the
contract, as well as any collateral or security provided by the customer or the
entity, including assets transferred in the contract. An entity may be able to
determine that rate by identifying the rate that discounts the nominal
amount of the promised consideration to the price that the customer would
pay in cash for the goods or services when (or as) they transfer to the
customer. After contract inception, an entity shall not update the discount
rate for changes in interest rates or other circumstances (such as a change in
the assessment of the customer’s credit risk).
An entity shall present the effects of financing (interest revenue or interest
expense) separately from revenue from contracts with customers in the
statement of comprehensive income. Interest revenue or interest expense is
recognised only to the extent that a contract asset (or receivable) or a contract
liability is recognised in accounting for a contract with a customer.

Non-cash consideration


To determine the transaction price for contracts in which a customer
promises consideration in a form other than cash, an entity shall measure the
non-cash consideration (or promise of non-cash consideration) at fair value.
If an entity cannot reasonably estimate the fair value of the non-cash
consideration, the entity shall measure the consideration indirectly by
reference to the stand-alone selling price of the goods or services promised to
the customer (or class of customer) in exchange for the consideration.
The fair value of the non-cash consideration may vary because of the form of
the consideration (for example, a change in the price of a share to which an
entity is entitled to receive from a customer). If the fair value of the non-cash
consideration promised by a customer varies for reasons other than only the
form of the consideration (for example, the fair value could vary because of
the entity’s performance), an entity shall apply the requirements in
paragraphs 56–58.
If a customer contributes goods or services (for example, materials, equipment
or labour) to facilitate an entity’s fulfilment of the contract, the entity shall
assess whether it obtains control of those contributed goods or services. If so,
the entity shall account for the contributed goods or services as non-cash
consideration received from the customer.

Consideration payable to a customer


Consideration payable to a customer includes cash amounts that an entity
pays, or expects to pay, to the customer (or to other parties that purchase the
entity’s goods or services from the customer). Consideration payable to a
customer also includes credit or other items (for example, a coupon or
voucher) that can be applied against amounts owed to the entity (or to other
parties that purchase the entity’s goods or services from the customer). An
entity shall account for consideration payable to a customer as a reduction of
the transaction price and, therefore, of revenue unless the payment to the
customer is in exchange for a distinct good or service (as described in
paragraphs 26–30) that the customer transfers to the entity. If the
consideration payable to a customer includes a variable amount, an entity
shall estimate the transaction price (including assessing whether the estimate
of variable consideration is constrained) in accordance with paragraphs 50–58.
If consideration payable to a customer is a payment for a distinct good or
service from the customer, then an entity shall account for the purchase of
the good or service in the same way that it accounts for other purchases from
suppliers. If the amount of consideration payable to the customer exceeds the
fair value of the distinct good or service that the entity receives from the
customer, then the entity shall account for such an excess as a reduction of
the transaction price. If the entity cannot reasonably estimate the fair value of
the good or service received from the customer, it shall account for all of the
consideration payable to the customer as a reduction of the transaction price.
Accordingly, if consideration payable to a customer is accounted for as a
reduction of the transaction price, an entity shall recognise the reduction of
revenue when (or as) the later of either of the following events occurs:
(a) the entity recognises revenue for the transfer of the related goods or
services to the customer; and
(b) the entity pays or promises to pay the consideration (even if the
payment is conditional on a future event). That promise might be
implied by the entity’s customary business practices.

Allocating the transaction price to performance
obligations


The objective when allocating the transaction price is for an entity to
allocate the transaction price to each performance obligation (or distinct
good or service) in an amount that depicts the amount of consideration to
which the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for transferring the
promised goods or services to the customer.
To meet the allocation objective, an entity shall allocate the transaction price

to each performance obligation identified in the contract on a relative stand-
alone selling price basis in accordance with paragraphs 76–80, except as

specified in paragraphs 81–83 (for allocating discounts) and paragraphs 84–86
(for allocating consideration that includes variable amounts).

Paragraphs 76–86 do not apply if a contract has only one performance
obligation. However, paragraphs 84–86 may apply if an entity promises to
transfer a series of distinct goods or services identified as a single performance
obligation in accordance with paragraph 22(b) and the promised consideration
includes variable amounts.

Allocation based on stand-alone selling prices


To allocate the transaction price to each performance obligation on a relative
stand-alone selling price basis, an entity shall determine the stand-alone
selling price at contract inception of the distinct good or service underlying
each performance obligation in the contract and allocate the transaction price
in proportion to those stand-alone selling prices.
The stand-alone selling price is the price at which an entity would sell a
promised good or service separately to a customer. The best evidence of a
stand-alone selling price is the observable price of a good or service when the
entity sells that good or service separately in similar circumstances and to
similar customers. A contractually stated price or a list price for a good or
service may be (but shall not be presumed to be) the stand-alone selling price
of that good or service.
If a stand-alone selling price is not directly observable, an entity shall estimate
the stand-alone selling price at an amount that would result in the allocation
of the transaction price meeting the allocation objective in paragraph 73.
When estimating a stand-alone selling price, an entity shall consider all
information (including market conditions, entity-specific factors and
information about the customer or class of customer) that is reasonably
available to the entity. In doing so, an entity shall maximise the use of
observable inputs and apply estimation methods consistently in similar
circumstances.
Suitable methods for estimating the stand-alone selling price of a good or
service include, but are not limited to, the following:
(a) Adjusted market assessment approach—an entity could evaluate the
market in which it sells goods or services and estimate the price that a
customer in that market would be willing to pay for those goods or
services. That approach might also include referring to prices from the
entity’s competitors for similar goods or services and adjusting those
prices as necessary to reflect the entity’s costs and margins.
(b) Expected cost plus a margin approach—an entity could forecast its
expected costs of satisfying a performance obligation and then add an
appropriate margin for that good or service.
(c) Residual approach—an entity may estimate the stand-alone selling
price by reference to the total transaction price less the sum of the
observable stand-alone selling prices of other goods or services
promised in the contract. However, an entity may use a residual

approach to estimate, in accordance with paragraph 78, the stand-
alone selling price of a good or service only if one of the following

criteria is met:

(i) the entity sells the same good or service to different customers
(at or near the same time) for a broad range of amounts (ie the

selling price is highly variable because a representative stand-
alone selling price is not discernible from past transactions or

other observable evidence); or
(ii) the entity has not yet established a price for that good or
service and the good or service has not previously been sold on
a stand-alone basis (ie the selling price is uncertain).
A combination of methods may need to be used to estimate the stand-alone
selling prices of the goods or services promised in the contract if two or more
of those goods or services have highly variable or uncertain stand-alone selling
prices. For example, an entity may use a residual approach to estimate the
aggregate stand-alone selling price for those promised goods or services with
highly variable or uncertain stand-alone selling prices and then use another
method to estimate the stand-alone selling prices of the individual goods or
services relative to that estimated aggregate stand-alone selling price
determined by the residual approach. When an entity uses a combination of
methods to estimate the stand-alone selling price of each promised good or
service in the contract, the entity shall evaluate whether allocating the
transaction price at those estimated stand-alone selling prices would be
consistent with the allocation objective in paragraph 73 and the requirements
for estimating stand-alone selling prices in paragraph 78.

Allocation of a discount


A customer receives a discount for purchasing a bundle of goods or services if
the sum of the stand-alone selling prices of those promised goods or services
in the contract exceeds the promised consideration in a contract. Except when
an entity has observable evidence in accordance with paragraph 82 that the
entire discount relates to only one or more, but not all, performance
obligations in a contract, the entity shall allocate a discount proportionately to
all performance obligations in the contract. The proportionate allocation of
the discount in those circumstances is a consequence of the entity allocating
the transaction price to each performance obligation on the basis of the
relative stand-alone selling prices of the underlying distinct goods or services.
An entity shall allocate a discount entirely to one or more, but not all,
performance obligations in the contract if all of the following criteria are met:
(a) the entity regularly sells each distinct good or service (or each bundle
of distinct goods or services) in the contract on a stand-alone basis;
(b) the entity also regularly sells on a stand-alone basis a bundle (or
bundles) of some of those distinct goods or services at a discount to the
stand-alone selling prices of the goods or services in each bundle; and
(c) the discount attributable to each bundle of goods or services described
in paragraph 82(b) is substantially the same as the discount in the
contract and an analysis of the goods or services in each bundle
provides observable evidence of the performance obligation (or performance obligations) to which the entire discount in the contract
belongs.
If a discount is allocated entirely to one or more performance obligations in
the contract in accordance with paragraph 82, an entity shall allocate the
discount before using the residual approach to estimate the stand-alone
selling price of a good or service in accordance with paragraph 79(c).

Allocation of variable consideration


Variable consideration that is promised in a contract may be attributable to
the entire contract or to a specific part of the contract, such as either of the
following:
(a) one or more, but not all, performance obligations in the contract (for
example, a bonus may be contingent on an entity transferring a
promised good or service within a specified period of time); or
(b) one or more, but not all, distinct goods or services promised in a series
of distinct goods or services that forms part of a single performance
obligation in accordance with paragraph 22(b) (for example, the
consideration promised for the second year of a two-year cleaning
service contract will increase on the basis of movements in a specified
inflation index).
An entity shall allocate a variable amount (and subsequent changes to that
amount) entirely to a performance obligation or to a distinct good or service
that forms part of a single performance obligation in accordance with
paragraph 22(b) if both of the following criteria are met:
(a) the terms of a variable payment relate specifically to the entity’s
efforts to satisfy the performance obligation or transfer the distinct
good or service (or to a specific outcome from satisfying the
performance obligation or transferring the distinct good or service);
and
(b) allocating the variable amount of consideration entirely to the
performance obligation or the distinct good or service is consistent
with the allocation objective in paragraph 73 when considering all of
the performance obligations and payment terms in the contract.
The allocation requirements in paragraphs 73–83 shall be applied to allocate
the remaining amount of the transaction price that does not meet the criteria
in paragraph 85.

Changes in the transaction price


After contract inception, the transaction price can change for various reasons,
including the resolution of uncertain events or other changes in
circumstances that change the amount of consideration to which an entity
expects to be entitled in exchange for the promised goods or services.

An entity shall allocate to the performance obligations in the contract any
subsequent changes in the transaction price on the same basis as at contract
inception. Consequently, an entity shall not reallocate the transaction price to
reflect changes in stand-alone selling prices after contract inception. Amounts
allocated to a satisfied performance obligation shall be recognised as revenue,
or as a reduction of revenue, in the period in which the transaction price
changes.
An entity shall allocate a change in the transaction price entirely to one or
more, but not all, performance obligations or distinct goods or services
promised in a series that forms part of a single performance obligation in
accordance with paragraph 22(b) only if the criteria in paragraph 85 on
allocating variable consideration are met.
An entity shall account for a change in the transaction price that arises as a
result of a contract modification in accordance with paragraphs 18–21.
However, for a change in the transaction price that occurs after a contract
modification, an entity shall apply paragraphs 87–89 to allocate the change in
the transaction price in whichever of the following ways is applicable:
(a) An entity shall allocate the change in the transaction price to the
performance obligations identified in the contract before the
modification if, and to the extent that, the change in the transaction
price is attributable to an amount of variable consideration promised
before the modification and the modification is accounted for in
accordance with paragraph 21(a).
(b) In all other cases in which the modification was not accounted for as a
separate contract in accordance with paragraph 20, an entity shall
allocate the change in the transaction price to the performance
obligations in the modified contract (ie the performance obligations
that were unsatisfied or partially unsatisfied immediately after the
modification).

Contract costs

Incremental costs of obtaining a contract


An entity shall recognise as an asset the incremental costs of obtaining a
contract with a customer if the entity expects to recover those costs.
The incremental costs of obtaining a contract are those costs that an entity
incurs to obtain a contract with a customer that it would not have incurred if
the contract had not been obtained (for example, a sales commission).
Costs to obtain a contract that would have been incurred regardless of
whether the contract was obtained shall be recognised as an expense when
incurred, unless those costs are explicitly chargeable to the customer
regardless of whether the contract is obtained.

As a practical expedient, an entity may recognise the incremental costs of
obtaining a contract as an expense when incurred if the amortisation period
of the asset that the entity otherwise would have recognised is one year or
less.

Costs to fulfil a contract


If the costs incurred in fulfilling a contract with a customer are not within
the scope of another Standard (for example, IAS 2 Inventories, IAS 16
Property, Plant and Equipment or IAS 38 Intangible Assets), an entity shall
recognise an asset from the costs incurred to fulfil a contract only if those
costs meet all of the following criteria:
(a) the costs relate directly to a contract or to an anticipated contract
that the entity can specifically identify (for example, costs relating
to services to be provided under renewal of an existing contract or
costs of designing an asset to be transferred under a specific
contract that has not yet been approved);
(b) the costs generate or enhance resources of the entity that will be
used in satisfying (or in continuing to satisfy) performance
obligations in the future; and
(c) the costs are expected to be recovered.
For costs incurred in fulfilling a contract with a customer that are within the
scope of another Standard, an entity shall account for those costs in
accordance with those other Standards.
Costs that relate directly to a contract (or a specific anticipated contract)
include any of the following:
(a) direct labour (for example, salaries and wages of employees who
provide the promised services directly to the customer);
(b) direct materials (for example, supplies used in providing the promised
services to a customer);
(c) allocations of costs that relate directly to the contract or to contract
activities (for example, costs of contract management and supervision,
insurance and depreciation of tools, equipment and right-of-use assets
used in fulfilling the contract);
(d) costs that are explicitly chargeable to the customer under the contract;
and
(e) other costs that are incurred only because an entity entered into the
contract (for example, payments to subcontractors).
An entity shall recognise the following costs as expenses when incurred:
(a) general and administrative costs (unless those costs are explicitly
chargeable to the customer under the contract, in which case an entity
shall evaluate those costs in accordance with paragraph 97);

(b) costs of wasted materials, labour or other resources to fulfil the
contract that were not reflected in the price of the contract;
(c) costs that relate to satisfied performance obligations (or partially
satisfied performance obligations) in the contract (ie costs that relate
to past performance); and
(d) costs for which an entity cannot distinguish whether the costs relate to
unsatisfied performance obligations or to satisfied performance
obligations (or partially satisfied performance obligations).

Amortisation and impairment


An asset recognised in accordance with paragraph 91 or 95 shall be amortised
on a systematic basis that is consistent with the transfer to the customer of
the goods or services to which the asset relates. The asset may relate to goods
or services to be transferred under a specific anticipated contract (as described
in paragraph 95(a)).
An entity shall update the amortisation to reflect a significant change in the
entity’s expected timing of transfer to the customer of the goods or services to
which the asset relates. Such a change shall be accounted for as a change in
accounting estimate in accordance with IAS 8.
An entity shall recognise an impairment loss in profit or loss to the extent
that the carrying amount of an asset recognised in accordance with
paragraph 91 or 95 exceeds:
(a) the remaining amount of consideration that the entity expects to
receive in exchange for the goods or services to which the asset relates;
less
(b) the costs that relate directly to providing those goods or services and
that have not been recognised as expenses (see paragraph 97).
For the purposes of applying paragraph 101 to determine the amount of
consideration that an entity expects to receive, an entity shall use the
principles for determining the transaction price (except for the requirements
in paragraphs 56–58 on constraining estimates of variable consideration) and
adjust that amount to reflect the effects of the customer’s credit risk.
Before an entity recognises an impairment loss for an asset recognised in
accordance with paragraph 91 or 95, the entity shall recognise any
impairment loss for assets related to the contract that are recognised in
accordance with another Standard (for example, IAS 2, IAS 16 and IAS 38).
After applying the impairment test in paragraph 101, an entity shall include
the resulting carrying amount of the asset recognised in accordance with
paragraph 91 or 95 in the carrying amount of the cash-generating unit to
which it belongs for the purpose of applying IAS 36 Impairment of Assets to that
cash-generating unit.

An entity shall recognise in profit or loss a reversal of some or all of an
impairment loss previously recognised in accordance with paragraph 101
when the impairment conditions no longer exist or have improved. The
increased carrying amount of the asset shall not exceed the amount that
would have been determined (net of amortisation) if no impairment loss had
been recognised previously.

Presentation


When either party to a contract has performed, an entity shall present the
contract in the statement of financial position as a contract asset or a
contract liability, depending on the relationship between the entity’s
performance and the customer’s payment. An entity shall present any
unconditional rights to consideration separately as a receivable.
If a customer pays consideration, or an entity has a right to an amount of
consideration that is unconditional (ie a receivable), before the entity transfers
a good or service to the customer, the entity shall present the contract as
a contract liability when the payment is made or the payment is due
(whichever is earlier). A contract liability is an entity’s obligation to transfer
goods or services to a customer for which the entity has received
consideration (or an amount of consideration is due) from the customer.
If an entity performs by transferring goods or services to a customer before
the customer pays consideration or before payment is due, the entity shall
present the contract as a contract asset, excluding any amounts presented as a
receivable. A contract asset is an entity’s right to consideration in exchange
for goods or services that the entity has transferred to a customer. An entity
shall assess a contract asset for impairment in accordance with IFRS 9. An
impairment of a contract asset shall be measured, presented and disclosed on
the same basis as a financial asset that is within the scope of IFRS 9 (see also
paragraph 113(b)).
A receivable is an entity’s right to consideration that is unconditional. A right
to consideration is unconditional if only the passage of time is required before
payment of that consideration is due. For example, an entity would recognise
a receivable if it has a present right to payment even though that amount may
be subject to refund in the future. An entity shall account for a receivable in
accordance with IFRS 9. Upon initial recognition of a receivable from
a contract with a customer, any difference between the measurement of the
receivable in accordance with IFRS 9 and the corresponding amount
of revenue recognised shall be presented as an expense (for example, as an
impairment loss).
This Standard uses the terms ‘contract asset’ and ‘contract liability’ but does
not prohibit an entity from using alternative descriptions in the statement of
financial position for those items. If an entity uses an alternative description
for a contract asset, the entity shall provide sufficient information for a user
of the financial statements to distinguish between receivables and contract
assets.

Disclosure


The objective of the disclosure requirements is for an entity to disclose
sufficient information to enable users of financial statements to
understand the nature, amount, timing and uncertainty of revenue and
cash flows arising from contracts with customers. To achieve that
objective, an entity shall disclose qualitative and quantitative information
about all of the following:
(a) its contracts with customers (see paragraphs 113–122);
(b) the significant judgements, and changes in the judgements, made in
applying this Standard to those contracts (see paragraphs 123–126);
and
(c) any assets recognised from the costs to obtain or fulfil a contract
with a customer in accordance with paragraph 91 or 95 (see
paragraphs 127–128).
An entity shall consider the level of detail necessary to satisfy the disclosure
objective and how much emphasis to place on each of the various
requirements. An entity shall aggregate or disaggregate disclosures so that
useful information is not obscured by either the inclusion of a large amount
of insignificant detail or the aggregation of items that have substantially
different characteristics.
An entity need not disclose information in accordance with this Standard if it
has provided the information in accordance with another Standard.

Contracts with customers


An entity shall disclose all of the following amounts for the reporting period
unless those amounts are presented separately in the statement of
comprehensive income in accordance with other Standards:
(a) revenue recognised from contracts with customers, which the entity
shall disclose separately from its other sources of revenue; and
(b) any impairment losses recognised (in accordance with IFRS 9) on any
receivables or contract assets arising from an entity’s contracts with
customers, which the entity shall disclose separately from impairment
losses from other contracts.

Disaggregation of revenue


An entity shall disaggregate revenue recognised from contracts with
customers into categories that depict how the nature, amount, timing and
uncertainty of revenue and cash flows are affected by economic factors. An
entity shall apply the guidance in paragraphs B87–B89 when selecting the
categories to use to disaggregate revenue.

In addition, an entity shall disclose sufficient information to enable users of
financial statements to understand the relationship between the disclosure of
disaggregated revenue (in accordance with paragraph 114) and revenue
information that is disclosed for each reportable segment, if the entity applies
IFRS 8 Operating Segments.

Contract balances


An entity shall disclose all of the following:
(a) the opening and closing balances of receivables, contract
assets and contract liabilities from contracts with customers, if not
otherwise separately presented or disclosed;
(b) revenue recognised in the reporting period that was included in the
contract liability balance at the beginning of the period; and
(c) revenue recognised in the reporting period from performance
obligations satisfied (or partially satisfied) in previous periods (for
example, changes in transaction price).
An entity shall explain how the timing of satisfaction of its performance
obligations (see paragraph 119(a)) relates to the typical timing of payment (see
paragraph 119(b)) and the effect that those factors have on the contract asset
and the contract liability balances. The explanation provided may use
qualitative information.
An entity shall provide an explanation of the significant changes in
the contract asset and the contract liability balances during the reporting
period. The explanation shall include qualitative and quantitative
information. Examples of changes in the entity’s balances of contract assets
and contract liabilities include any of the following:
(a) changes due to business combinations;
(b) cumulative catch-up adjustments to revenue that affect the
corresponding contract asset or contract liability, including
adjustments arising from a change in the measure of progress, a
change in an estimate of the transaction price (including any changes
in the assessment of whether an estimate of variable consideration is
constrained) or a contract modification;
(c) impairment of a contract asset;
(d) a change in the time frame for a right to consideration to become
unconditional (ie for a contract asset to be reclassified to a receivable);
and
(e) a change in the time frame for a performance obligation to be satisfied
(ie for the recognition of revenue arising from a contract liability).

Performance obligations


An entity shall disclose information about its performance obligations in
contracts with customers, including a description of all of the following:
(a) when the entity typically satisfies its performance obligations (for
example, upon shipment, upon delivery, as services are rendered or
upon completion of service), including when performance obligations
are satisfied in a bill-and-hold arrangement;
(b) the significant payment terms (for example, when payment is typically
due, whether the contract has a significant financing component,
whether the consideration amount is variable and whether the
estimate of variable consideration is typically constrained in
accordance with paragraphs 56–58);
(c) the nature of the goods or services that the entity has promised to
transfer, highlighting any performance obligations to arrange for
another party to transfer goods or services (ie if the entity is acting as
an agent);
(d) obligations for returns, refunds and other similar obligations; and
(e) types of warranties and related obligations.

Transaction price allocated to the remaining performance
obligations


An entity shall disclose the following information about its remaining
performance obligations:
(a) the aggregate amount of the transaction price allocated to the
performance obligations that are unsatisfied (or partially unsatisfied)
as of the end of the reporting period; and
(b) an explanation of when the entity expects to recognise as revenue the
amount disclosed in accordance with paragraph 120(a), which the
entity shall disclose in either of the following ways:
(i) on a quantitative basis using the time bands that would be
most appropriate for the duration of the remaining
performance obligations; or
(ii) by using qualitative information.
As a practical expedient, an entity need not disclose the information in
paragraph 120 for a performance obligation if either of the following
conditions is met:
(a) the performance obligation is part of a contract that has an original
expected duration of one year or less; or
(b) the entity recognises revenue from the satisfaction of the performance
obligation in accordance with paragraph B16.

An entity shall explain qualitatively whether it is applying the practical
expedient in paragraph 121 and whether any consideration from contracts
with customers is not included in the transaction price and, therefore, not
included in the information disclosed in accordance with paragraph 120. For
example, an estimate of the transaction price would not include any estimated
amounts of variable consideration that are constrained (see paragraphs
56–58).

Significant judgements in the application of this Standard


An entity shall disclose the judgements, and changes in the judgements, made
in applying this Standard that significantly affect the determination of the
amount and timing of revenue from contracts with customers. In particular,
an entity shall explain the judgements, and changes in the judgements, used
in determining both of the following:
(a) the timing of satisfaction of performance obligations (see paragraphs
124–125); and
(b) the transaction price and the amounts allocated to performance
obligations (see paragraph 126).

Determining the timing of satisfaction of performance obligations


For performance obligations that an entity satisfies over time, an entity shall
disclose both of the following:
(a) the methods used to recognise revenue (for example, a description of
the output methods or input methods used and how those methods
are applied); and
(b) an explanation of why the methods used provide a faithful depiction of
the transfer of goods or services.
For performance obligations satisfied at a point in time, an entity shall
disclose the significant judgements made in evaluating when a customer
obtains control of promised goods or services.

Determining the transaction price and the amounts allocated to
performance obligations


An entity shall disclose information about the methods, inputs and
assumptions used for all of the following:
(a) determining the transaction price, which includes, but is not limited
to, estimating variable consideration, adjusting the consideration for
the effects of the time value of money and measuring non-cash
consideration;
(b) assessing whether an estimate of variable consideration is constrained;
(c) allocating the transaction price, including estimating stand-alone
selling prices of promised goods or services and allocating discounts
and variable consideration to a specific part of the contract (if
applicable); and

(d) measuring obligations for returns, refunds and other similar
obligations.

Assets recognized from the costs to obtain or fulfill a
contract with a customer


An entity shall describe both of the following:
(a) the judgements made in determining the amount of the costs incurred
to obtain or fulfil a contract with a customer (in accordance with
paragraph 91 or 95); and
(b) the method it uses to determine the amortisation for each reporting
period.
An entity shall disclose all of the following:
(a) the closing balances of assets recognised from the costs incurred to
obtain or fulfil a contract with a customer (in accordance with
paragraph 91 or 95), by main category of asset (for example, costs to
obtain contracts with customers, pre-contract costs and setup costs);
and
(b) the amount of amortisation and any impairment losses recognised in
the reporting period.

Practical expedients


If an entity elects to use the practical expedient in either paragraph 63 (about
the existence of a significant financing component) or paragraph 94 (about the
incremental costs of obtaining a contract), the entity shall disclose that fact.

Appendix A


Defined terms


This appendix is an integral part of the Standard.

contract

An agreement between two or more parties that creates

enforceable rights and obligations.

contract asset

An entity’s right to consideration in exchange for goods or
services that the entity has transferred to a customer when
that right is conditioned on something other than the passage
of time (for example, the entity’s future performance).

contract liability

An entity’s obligation to transfer goods or services to a
customer for which the entity has received consideration (or
the amount is due) from the customer.

customer

A party that has contracted with an entity to obtain goods or
services that are an output of the entity’s ordinary activities in
exchange for consideration.

income

Increases in economic benefits during the accounting period in
the form of inflows or enhancements of assets or decreases of
liabilities that result in an increase in equity, other than those
relating to contributions from equity participants.

performance
obligation

A promise in a contract with a customer to transfer to the
customer either:
(a) a good or service (or a bundle of goods or services) that
is distinct; or
(b) a series of distinct goods or services that are
substantially the same and that have the same pattern
of transfer to the customer.

revenue

Income arising in the course of an entity’s ordinary activities.

stand-alone selling
price
(of a good or service)

The price at which an entity would sell a promised good or
service separately to a customer.

transaction price
(for a contract with a
customer)

The amount of consideration to which an entity expects to be
entitled in exchange for transferring promised goods or services
to a customer, excluding amounts collected on behalf of third
parties.

Appendix B

Application Guidance

This appendix is an integral part of the Standard. It describes the application of paragraphs 1–129
and has the same authority as the other parts of the Standard.
This application guidance is organised into the following categories:
(a) performance obligations satisfied over time (paragraphs B2–B13);
(b) methods for measuring progress towards complete satisfaction of a
performance obligation (paragraphs B14–B19);
(c) sale with a right of return (paragraphs B20–B27);
(d) warranties (paragraphs B28–B33);
(e) principal versus agent considerations (paragraphs B34–B38);
(f) customer options for additional goods or services (paragraphs
B39–B43);
(g) customers’ unexercised rights (paragraphs B44–B47);
(h) non-refundable upfront fees (and some related costs) (paragraphs
B48–B51);
(i) licensing (paragraphs B52–B63B);
(j) repurchase agreements (paragraphs B64–B76);
(k) consignment arrangements (paragraphs B77–B78);
(l) bill-and-hold arrangements (paragraphs B79–B82);
(m) customer acceptance (paragraphs B83–B86); and
(n) disclosure of disaggregated revenue (paragraphs B87–B89).

Performance obligations satisfied over time


In accordance with paragraph 35, a performance obligation is satisfied over
time if one of the following criteria is met:
(a) the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefits
provided by the entity’s performance as the entity performs (see
paragraphs B3–B4);
(b) the entity’s performance creates or enhances an asset (for example,
work in progress) that the customer controls as the asset is created or
enhanced (see paragraph B5); or
(c) the entity’s performance does not create an asset with an alternative
use to the entity (see paragraphs B6–B8) and the entity has an
enforceable right to payment for performance completed to date (see
paragraphs B9–B13).

 

Simultaneous receipt and consumption of the benefits of the
entity’s performance (paragraph 35(a))


For some types of performance obligations, the assessment of whether a
customer receives the benefits of an entity’s performance as the entity
performs and simultaneously consumes those benefits as they are received
will be straightforward. Examples include routine or recurring services (such
as a cleaning service) in which the receipt and simultaneous consumption by
the customer of the benefits of the entity’s performance can be readily
identified.
For other types of performance obligations, an entity may not be able to
readily identify whether a customer simultaneously receives and consumes
the benefits from the entity’s performance as the entity performs. In those
circumstances, a performance obligation is satisfied over time if an entity
determines that another entity would not need to substantially re-perform the
work that the entity has completed to date if that other entity were to fulfil
the remaining performance obligation to the customer. In determining
whether another entity would not need to substantially re-perform the work
the entity has completed to date, an entity shall make both of the following
assumptions:
(a) disregard potential contractual restrictions or practical limitations that
otherwise would prevent the entity from transferring the remaining
performance obligation to another entity; and
(b) presume that another entity fulfilling the remainder of the
performance obligation would not have the benefit of any asset that is
presently controlled by the entity and that would remain controlled by
the entity if the performance obligation were to transfer to another
entity.

Customer controls the asset as it is created or enhanced
(paragraph 35(b))


In determining whether a customer controls an asset as it is created or
enhanced in accordance with paragraph 35(b), an entity shall apply the
requirements for control in paragraphs 31–34 and 38. The asset that is being
created or enhanced (for example, a work-in-progress asset) could be either
tangible or intangible.

Entity’s performance does not create an asset with an alternative
use (paragraph 35(c))


In assessing whether an asset has an alternative use to an entity in accordance
with paragraph 36, an entity shall consider the effects of contractual
restrictions and practical limitations on the entity’s ability to readily direct
that asset for another use, such as selling it to a different customer. The
possibility of the contract with the customer being terminated is not a
relevant consideration in assessing whether the entity would be able to readily
direct the asset for another use.

A contractual restriction on an entity’s ability to direct an asset for another
use must be substantive for the asset not to have an alternative use to the
entity. A contractual restriction is substantive if a customer could enforce its
rights to the promised asset if the entity sought to direct the asset for another
use. In contrast, a contractual restriction is not substantive if, for example, an
asset is largely interchangeable with other assets that the entity could transfer
to another customer without breaching the contract and without incurring
significant costs that otherwise would not have been incurred in relation to
that contract.
A practical limitation on an entity’s ability to direct an asset for another use
exists if an entity would incur significant economic losses to direct the asset
for another use. A significant economic loss could arise because the entity
either would incur significant costs to rework the asset or would only be able
to sell the asset at a significant loss. For example, an entity may be practically
limited from redirecting assets that either have design specifications that are
unique to a customer or are located in remote areas.

Right to payment for performance completed to date
(paragraph 35(c))


In accordance with paragraph 37, an entity has a right to payment for
performance completed to date if the entity would be entitled to an amount
that at least compensates the entity for its performance completed to date in
the event that the customer or another party terminates the contract for
reasons other than the entity’s failure to perform as promised. An amount
that would compensate an entity for performance completed to date would be
an amount that approximates the selling price of the goods or services
transferred to date (for example, recovery of the costs incurred by an entity in
satisfying the performance obligation plus a reasonable profit margin) rather
than compensation for only the entity’s potential loss of profit if the contract
were to be terminated. Compensation for a reasonable profit margin need not
equal the profit margin expected if the contract was fulfilled as promised, but
an entity should be entitled to compensation for either of the following
amounts:
(a) a proportion of the expected profit margin in the contract that
reasonably reflects the extent of the entity’s performance under the
contract before termination by the customer (or another party); or
(b) a reasonable return on the entity’s cost of capital for similar contracts
(or the entity’s typical operating margin for similar contracts) if the
contract-specific margin is higher than the return the entity usually
generates from similar contracts.
An entity’s right to payment for performance completed to date need not be a
present unconditional right to payment. In many cases, an entity will have an
unconditional right to payment only at an agreed-upon milestone or upon
complete satisfaction of the performance obligation. In assessing whether it
has a right to payment for performance completed to date, an entity shall
consider whether it would have an enforceable right to demand or retain
payment for performance completed to date if the contract were to be terminated before completion for reasons other than the entity’s failure to
perform as promised.
In some contracts, a customer may have a right to terminate the contract only
at specified times during the life of the contract or the customer might not
have any right to terminate the contract. If a customer acts to terminate a
contract without having the right to terminate the contract at that time
(including when a customer fails to perform its obligations as promised), the
contract (or other laws) might entitle the entity to continue to transfer to the
customer the goods or services promised in the contract and require the
customer to pay the consideration promised in exchange for those goods or
services. In those circumstances, an entity has a right to payment for
performance completed to date because the entity has a right to continue to
perform its obligations in accordance with the contract and to require the
customer to perform its obligations (which include paying the promised
consideration).
In assessing the existence and enforceability of a right to payment for
performance completed to date, an entity shall consider the contractual terms
as well as any legislation or legal precedent that could supplement or override
those contractual terms. This would include an assessment of whether:
(a) legislation, administrative practice or legal precedent confers upon the
entity a right to payment for performance to date even though that
right is not specified in the contract with the customer;
(b) relevant legal precedent indicates that similar rights to payment for
performance completed to date in similar contracts have no binding
legal effect; or
(c) an entity’s customary business practices of choosing not to enforce a
right to payment has resulted in the right being rendered
unenforceable in that legal environment. However, notwithstanding
that an entity may choose to waive its right to payment in similar
contracts, an entity would continue to have a right to payment to date
if, in the contract with the customer, its right to payment for
performance to date remains enforceable.
The payment schedule specified in a contract does not necessarily indicate
whether an entity has an enforceable right to payment for performance
completed to date. Although the payment schedule in a contract specifies the
timing and amount of consideration that is payable by a customer, the
payment schedule might not necessarily provide evidence of the entity’s right
to payment for performance completed to date. This is because, for example,
the contract could specify that the consideration received from the customer
is refundable for reasons other than the entity failing to perform as promised
in the contract.

Methods for measuring progress towards complete
satisfaction of a performance obligation


Methods that can be used to measure an entity’s progress towards complete
satisfaction of a performance obligation satisfied over time in accordance with
paragraphs 35–37 include the following:
(a) output methods (see paragraphs B15–B17); and
(b) input methods (see paragraphs B18–B19).

Output methods


Output methods recognise revenue on the basis of direct measurements of the
value to the customer of the goods or services transferred to date relative to
the remaining goods or services promised under the contract. Output methods
include methods such as surveys of performance completed to date, appraisals
of results achieved, milestones reached, time elapsed and units produced or
units delivered. When an entity evaluates whether to apply an output method
to measure its progress, the entity shall consider whether the output selected
would faithfully depict the entity’s performance towards complete satisfaction
of the performance obligation. An output method would not provide a faithful
depiction of the entity’s performance if the output selected would fail to
measure some of the goods or services for which control has transferred to the
customer. For example, output methods based on units produced or units
delivered would not faithfully depict an entity’s performance in satisfying a
performance obligation if, at the end of the reporting period, the entity’s
performance has produced work in progress or finished goods controlled by
the customer that are not included in the measurement of the output.
As a practical expedient, if an entity has a right to consideration from a
customer in an amount that corresponds directly with the value to the
customer of the entity’s performance completed to date (for example, a service
contract in which an entity bills a fixed amount for each hour of service
provided), the entity may recognise revenue in the amount to which the entity
has a right to invoice.
The disadvantages of output methods are that the outputs used to measure
progress may not be directly observable and the information required to apply
them may not be available to an entity without undue cost. Therefore, an
input method may be necessary.

Input methods


Input methods recognise revenue on the basis of the entity’s efforts or inputs
to the satisfaction of a performance obligation (for example, resources
consumed, labour hours expended, costs incurred, time elapsed or machine
hours used) relative to the total expected inputs to the satisfaction of that
performance obligation. If the entity’s efforts or inputs are expended evenly
throughout the performance period, it may be appropriate for the entity to
recognise revenue on a straight-line basis.

A shortcoming of input methods is that there may not be a direct relationship
between an entity’s inputs and the transfer of control of goods or services to
a customer. Therefore, an entity shall exclude from an input method the
effects of any inputs that, in accordance with the objective of measuring
progress in paragraph 39, do not depict the entity’s performance in
transferring control of goods or services to the customer. For instance, when
using a cost-based input method, an adjustment to the measure of progress
may be required in the following circumstances:
(a) When a cost incurred does not contribute to an entity’s progress in
satisfying the performance obligation. For example, an entity would
not recognise revenue on the basis of costs incurred that are
attributable to significant inefficiencies in the entity’s performance
that were not reflected in the price of the contract (for example, the
costs of unexpected amounts of wasted materials, labour or other
resources that were incurred to satisfy the performance obligation).
(b) When a cost incurred is not proportionate to the entity’s progress in
satisfying the performance obligation. In those circumstances, the best
depiction of the entity’s performance may be to adjust the input
method to recognise revenue only to the extent of that cost incurred.
For example, a faithful depiction of an entity’s performance might be
to recognise revenue at an amount equal to the cost of a good used to
satisfy a performance obligation if the entity expects at contract
inception that all of the following conditions would be met:
(i) the good is not distinct;
(ii) the customer is expected to obtain control of the good
significantly before receiving services related to the good;
(iii) the cost of the transferred good is significant relative to the
total expected costs to completely satisfy the performance
obligation; and
(iv) the entity procures the good from a third party and is not
significantly involved in designing and manufacturing the good
(but the entity is acting as a principal in accordance
with paragraphs B34–B38).

Sale with a right of return


In some contracts, an entity transfers control of a product to a customer and
also grants the customer the right to return the product for various reasons
(such as dissatisfaction with the product) and receive any combination of the
following:
(a) a full or partial refund of any consideration paid;
(b) a credit that can be applied against amounts owed, or that will be
owed, to the entity; and
(c) another product in exchange.

To account for the transfer of products with a right of return (and for some
services that are provided subject to a refund), an entity shall recognise all of
the following:
(a) revenue for the transferred products in the amount of consideration to
which the entity expects to be entitled (therefore, revenue would not
be recognised for the products expected to be returned);
(b) a refund liability; and
(c) an asset (and corresponding adjustment to cost of sales) for its right to
recover products from customers on settling the refund liability.
An entity’s promise to stand ready to accept a returned product during the
return period shall not be accounted for as a performance obligation in
addition to the obligation to provide a refund.
An entity shall apply the requirements in paragraphs 47–72 (including the
requirements for constraining estimates of variable consideration in
paragraphs 56–58) to determine the amount of consideration to which the
entity expects to be entitled (ie excluding the products expected to be
returned). For any amounts received (or receivable) for which an entity does
not expect to be entitled, the entity shall not recognise revenue when it
transfers products to customers but shall recognise those amounts received
(or receivable) as a refund liability. Subsequently, at the end of each reporting
period, the entity shall update its assessment of amounts for which it expects
to be entitled in exchange for the transferred products and make a
corresponding change to the transaction price and, therefore, in the amount
of revenue recognised.
An entity shall update the measurement of the refund liability at the end of
each reporting period for changes in expectations about the amount of
refunds. An entity shall recognise corresponding adjustments as revenue (or
reductions of revenue).
An asset recognised for an entity’s right to recover products from a customer
on settling a refund liability shall initially be measured by reference to the
former carrying amount of the product (for example, inventory) less any
expected costs to recover those products (including potential decreases in the
value to the entity of returned products). At the end of each reporting period,
an entity shall update the measurement of the asset arising from changes in
expectations about products to be returned. An entity shall present the asset
separately from the refund liability.
Exchanges by customers of one product for another of the same type, quality,
condition and price (for example, one colour or size for another) are not
considered returns for the purposes of applying this Standard.
Contracts in which a customer may return a defective product in exchange for
a functioning product shall be evaluated in accordance with the guidance on
warranties in paragraphs B28–B33.

Warranties


It is common for an entity to provide (in accordance with the contract, the law
or the entity’s customary business practices) a warranty in connection with
the sale of a product (whether a good or service). The nature of a warranty can
vary significantly across industries and contracts. Some warranties provide a
customer with assurance that the related product will function as the parties
intended because it complies with agreed-upon specifications. Other
warranties provide the customer with a service in addition to the assurance
that the product complies with agreed-upon specifications.
If a customer has the option to purchase a warranty separately (for example,
because the warranty is priced or negotiated separately), the warranty is a
distinct service because the entity promises to provide the service to the
customer in addition to the product that has the functionality described in the
contract. In those circumstances, an entity shall account for the promised
warranty as a performance obligation in accordance with paragraphs 22–30
and allocate a portion of the transaction price to that performance obligation
in accordance with paragraphs 73–86.
If a customer does not have the option to purchase a warranty separately, an
entity shall account for the warranty in accordance with IAS 37 Provisions,
Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets unless the promised warranty, or a
part of the promised warranty, provides the customer with a service in
addition to the assurance that the product complies with agreed-upon
specifications.
In assessing whether a warranty provides a customer with a service in
addition to the assurance that the product complies with agreed-upon
specifications, an entity shall consider factors such as:
(a) Whether the warranty is required by law—if the entity is required by
law to provide a warranty, the existence of that law indicates that the
promised warranty is not a performance obligation because such
requirements typically exist to protect customers from the risk of
purchasing defective products.
(b) The length of the warranty coverage period—the longer the coverage
period, the more likely it is that the promised warranty is a
performance obligation because it is more likely to provide a service in
addition to the assurance that the product complies with agreed-upon
specifications.
(c) The nature of the tasks that the entity promises to perform—if it is
necessary for an entity to perform specified tasks to provide the
assurance that a product complies with agreed-upon specifications (for
example, a return shipping service for a defective product), then those
tasks likely do not give rise to a performance obligation.
If a warranty, or a part of a warranty, provides a customer with a service in
addition to the assurance that the product complies with agreed-upon
specifications, the promised service is a performance obligation. Therefore, an
entity shall allocate the transaction price to the product and the service. If an entity promises both an assurance-type warranty and a service-type warranty
but cannot reasonably account for them separately, the entity shall account
for both of the warranties together as a single performance obligation.
A law that requires an entity to pay compensation if its products cause harm
or damage does not give rise to a performance obligation. For example, a
manufacturer might sell products in a jurisdiction in which the law holds the
manufacturer liable for any damages (for example, to personal property) that
might be caused by a consumer using a product for its intended purpose.
Similarly, an entity’s promise to indemnify the customer for liabilities and
damages arising from claims of patent, copyright, trademark or other
infringement by the entity’s products does not give rise to a performance
obligation. The entity shall account for such obligations in accordance with
IAS 37.

Principal versus agent considerations


When another party is involved in providing goods or services to a customer,
the entity shall determine whether the nature of its promise is a performance
obligation to provide the specified goods or services itself (ie the entity is a
principal) or to arrange for those goods or services to be provided by the other
party (ie the entity is an agent). An entity determines whether it is a principal
or an agent for each specified good or service promised to the customer. A
specified good or service is a distinct good or service (or a distinct bundle of
goods or services) to be provided to the customer (see paragraphs 27–30). If a
contract with a customer includes more than one specified good or service, an
entity could be a principal for some specified goods or services and an agent
for others.
To determine the nature of its promise (as described in paragraph B34), the
entity shall:
(a) identify the specified goods or services to be provided to the customer
(which, for example, could be a right to a good or service to be
provided by another party (see paragraph 26)); and
(b) assess whether it controls (as described in paragraph 33) each specified
good or service before that good or service is transferred to the
customer.
An entity is a principal if it controls the specified good or service before that
good or service is transferred to a customer. However, an entity does not
necessarily control a specified good if the entity obtains legal title to that good
only momentarily before legal title is transferred to a customer. An entity that
is a principal may satisfy its performance obligation to provide the specified
good or service itself or it may engage another party (for example, a
subcontractor) to satisfy some or all of the performance obligation on its
behalf.

When another party is involved in providing goods or services to a customer,
an entity that is a principal obtains control of any one of the following:
(a) a good or another asset from the other party that it then transfers to
the customer.
(b) a right to a service to be performed by the other party, which gives the
entity the ability to direct that party to provide the service to the
customer on the entity’s behalf.
(c) a good or service from the other party that it then combines with other
goods or services in providing the specified good or service to the
customer. For example, if an entity provides a significant service of
integrating goods or services (see paragraph 29(a)) provided by another
party into the specified good or service for which the customer has
contracted, the entity controls the specified good or service before that
good or service is transferred to the customer. This is because the
entity first obtains control of the inputs to the specified good or service
(which includes goods or services from other parties) and directs their
use to create the combined output that is the specified good or service.
When (or as) an entity that is a principal satisfies a performance obligation,
the entity recognises revenue in the gross amount of consideration to which it
expects to be entitled in exchange for the specified good or service transferred.
An entity is an agent if the entity’s performance obligation is to arrange for
the provision of the specified good or service by another party. An entity that
is an agent does not control the specified good or service provided by another
party before that good or service is transferred to the customer. When (or as)
an entity that is an agent satisfies a performance obligation, the entity
recognises revenue in the amount of any fee or commission to which it
expects to be entitled in exchange for arranging for the specified goods or
services to be provided by the other party. An entity’s fee or commission
might be the net amount of consideration that the entity retains after paying
the other party the consideration received in exchange for the goods or
services to be provided by that party.
Indicators that an entity controls the specified good or service before it is
transferred to the customer (and is therefore a principal (see paragraph B35))
include, but are not limited to, the following:
(a) the entity is primarily responsible for fulfilling the promise to provide
the specified good or service. This typically includes responsibility for
the acceptability of the specified good or service (for example, primary
responsibility for the good or service meeting customer specifications).
If the entity is primarily responsible for fulfilling the promise to
provide the specified good or service, this may indicate that the other
party involved in providing the specified good or service is acting on
the entity’s behalf.

(b) the entity has inventory risk before the specified good or service has
been transferred to a customer or after transfer of control to the
customer (for example, if the customer has a right of return). For
example, if the entity obtains, or commits itself to obtain, the specified
good or service before obtaining a contract with a customer, that may
indicate that the entity has the ability to direct the use of, and obtain
substantially all of the remaining benefits from, the good or service
before it is transferred to the customer.
(c) the entity has discretion in establishing the price for the specified good
or service. Establishing the price that the customer pays for the
specified good or service may indicate that the entity has the ability to
direct the use of that good or service and obtain substantially all of the
remaining benefits. However, an agent can have discretion in
establishing prices in some cases. For example, an agent may have
some flexibility in setting prices in order to generate additional
revenue from its service of arranging for goods or services to be
provided by other parties to customers.
The indicators in paragraph B37 may be more or less relevant to the
assessment of control depending on the nature of the specified good or service
and the terms and conditions of the contract. In addition, different indicators
may provide more persuasive evidence in different contracts.
If another entity assumes the entity’s performance obligations and
contractual rights in the contract so that the entity is no longer obliged to
satisfy the performance obligation to transfer the specified good or service to
the customer (ie the entity is no longer acting as the principal), the entity shall
not recognise revenue for that performance obligation. Instead, the entity
shall evaluate whether to recognise revenue for satisfying a performance
obligation to obtain a contract for the other party (ie whether the entity is
acting as an agent).

Customer options for additional goods or services


Customer options to acquire additional goods or services for free or at a
discount come in many forms, including sales incentives, customer award
credits (or points), contract renewal options or other discounts on future
goods or services.
If, in a contract, an entity grants a customer the option to acquire additional
goods or services, that option gives rise to a performance obligation in the
contract only if the option provides a material right to the customer that it
would not receive without entering into that contract (for example, a discount
that is incremental to the range of discounts typically given for those goods or
services to that class of customer in that geographical area or market). If the
option provides a material right to the customer, the customer in effect pays
the entity in advance for future goods or services and the entity recognises
revenue when those future goods or services are transferred or when the
option expires.

If a customer has the option to acquire an additional good or service at a price
that would reflect the stand-alone selling price for that good or service, that
option does not provide the customer with a material right even if the option
can be exercised only by entering into a previous contract. In those cases, the
entity has made a marketing offer that it shall account for in accordance with
this Standard only when the customer exercises the option to purchase the
additional goods or services.
Paragraph 74 requires an entity to allocate the transaction price to
performance obligations on a relative stand-alone selling price basis. If the
stand-alone selling price for a customer’s option to acquire additional goods or
services is not directly observable, an entity shall estimate it. That estimate
shall reflect the discount that the customer would obtain when exercising the
option, adjusted for both of the following:
(a) any discount that the customer could receive without exercising the
option; and
(b) the likelihood that the option will be exercised.
If a customer has a material right to acquire future goods or services and
those goods or services are similar to the original goods or services in the
contract and are provided in accordance with the terms of the original

contract, then an entity may, as a practical alternative to estimating the stand-
alone selling price of the option, allocate the transaction price to the optional

goods or services by reference to the goods or services expected to be provided
and the corresponding expected consideration. Typically, those types of
options are for contract renewals.

Customers’ unexercised rights


In accordance with paragraph 106, upon receipt of a prepayment from
a customer, an entity shall recognise a contract liability in the amount of the
prepayment for its performance obligation to transfer, or to stand ready to
transfer, goods or services in the future. An entity shall derecognise that
contract liability (and recognise revenue) when it transfers those goods or
services and, therefore, satisfies its performance obligation.
A customer’s non-refundable prepayment to an entity gives the customer a
right to receive a good or service in the future (and obliges the entity to stand
ready to transfer a good or service). However, customers may not exercise all
of their contractual rights. Those unexercised rights are often referred to as
breakage.
If an entity expects to be entitled to a breakage amount in a contract liability,
the entity shall recognise the expected breakage amount as revenue in
proportion to the pattern of rights exercised by the customer. If an entity does
not expect to be entitled to a breakage amount, the entity shall recognise the
expected breakage amount as revenue when the likelihood of the customer
exercising its remaining rights becomes remote. To determine whether an
entity expects to be entitled to a breakage amount, the entity shall consider the requirements in paragraphs 56–58 on constraining estimates of variable
consideration.
An entity shall recognise a liability (and not revenue) for any consideration
received that is attributable to a customer’s unexercised rights for which the
entity is required to remit to another party, for example, a government entity
in accordance with applicable unclaimed property laws.

Non-refundable upfront fees (and some related costs)


In some contracts, an entity charges a customer a non-refundable upfront fee
at or near contract inception. Examples include joining fees in health club
membership contracts, activation fees in telecommunication contracts, setup
fees in some services contracts and initial fees in some supply contracts.
To identify performance obligations in such contracts, an entity shall assess
whether the fee relates to the transfer of a promised good or service. In many
cases, even though a non-refundable upfront fee relates to an activity that the
entity is required to undertake at or near contract inception to fulfil the
contract, that activity does not result in the transfer of a promised good or
service to the customer (see paragraph 25). Instead, the upfront fee is an
advance payment for future goods or services and, therefore, would be
recognised as revenue when those future goods or services are provided. The
revenue recognition period would extend beyond the initial contractual period
if the entity grants the customer the option to renew the contract and that
option provides the customer with a material right as described in
paragraph B40.
If the non-refundable upfront fee relates to a good or service, the entity shall
evaluate whether to account for the good or service as a separate performance
obligation in accordance with paragraphs 22–30.
An entity may charge a non-refundable fee in part as compensation for costs
incurred in setting up a contract (or other administrative tasks as described in
paragraph 25). If those setup activities do not satisfy a performance obligation,
the entity shall disregard those activities (and related costs) when measuring
progress in accordance with paragraph B19. That is because the costs of setup
activities do not depict the transfer of services to the customer. The entity
shall assess whether costs incurred in setting up a contract have resulted in an
asset that shall be recognised in accordance with paragraph 95.

Licensing


A licence establishes a customer’s rights to the intellectual property of an
entity. Licences of intellectual property may include, but are not limited to,
licences of any of the following:
(a) software and technology;
(b) motion pictures, music and other forms of media and entertainment;
(c) franchises; and
(d) patents, trademarks and copyrights.

In addition to a promise to grant a licence (or licences) to a customer, an entity
may also promise to transfer other goods or services to the customer. Those
promises may be explicitly stated in the contract or implied by an entity’s
customary business practices, published policies or specific statements (see
paragraph 24). As with other types of contracts, when a contract with a
customer includes a promise to grant a licence (or licences) in addition to
other promised goods or services, an entity applies paragraphs 22–30 to
identify each of the performance obligations in the contract.
If the promise to grant a licence is not distinct from other promised goods or
services in the contract in accordance with paragraphs 26–30, an entity shall
account for the promise to grant a licence and those other promised goods or
services together as a single performance obligation. Examples of licences that
are not distinct from other goods or services promised in the contract include
the following:
(a) a licence that forms a component of a tangible good and that is
integral to the functionality of the good; and
(b) a licence that the customer can benefit from only in conjunction with
a related service (such as an online service provided by the entity that
enables, by granting a licence, the customer to access content).
If the licence is not distinct, an entity shall apply paragraphs 31–38 to
determine whether the performance obligation (which includes the promised
licence) is a performance obligation that is satisfied over time or satisfied at a
point in time.
If the promise to grant the licence is distinct from the other promised goods
or services in the contract and, therefore, the promise to grant the licence is a
separate performance obligation, an entity shall determine whether the
licence transfers to a customer either at a point in time or over time. In
making this determination, an entity shall consider whether the nature of the
entity’s promise in granting the licence to a customer is to provide the
customer with either:
(a) a right to access the entity’s intellectual property as it exists
throughout the licence period; or
(b) a right to use the entity’s intellectual property as it exists at the point
in time at which the licence is granted.

Determining the nature of the entity’s promise


[Deleted]
The nature of an entity’s promise in granting a licence is a promise to provide
a right to access the entity’s intellectual property if all of the following criteria
are met:
(a) the contract requires, or the customer reasonably expects, that the
entity will undertake activities that significantly affect the intellectual
property to which the customer has rights (see paragraphs B59 and
B59A);

(b) the rights granted by the licence directly expose the customer to any
positive or negative effects of the entity’s activities identified in
paragraph B58(a); and
(c) those activities do not result in the transfer of a good or a service to
the customer as those activities occur (see paragraph 25).
Factors that may indicate that a customer could reasonably expect that an
entity will undertake activities that significantly affect the intellectual
property include the entity’s customary business practices, published policies
or specific statements. Although not determinative, the existence of a shared
economic interest (for example, a sales-based royalty) between the entity and
the customer related to the intellectual property to which the customer has
rights may also indicate that the customer could reasonably expect that the
entity will undertake such activities.
An entity’s activities significantly affect the intellectual property to which the
customer has rights when either:
(a) those activities are expected to significantly change the form (for
example, the design or content) or the functionality (for example, the
ability to perform a function or task) of the intellectual property; or
(b) the ability of the customer to obtain benefit from the intellectual
property is substantially derived from, or dependent upon, those
activities. For example, the benefit from a brand is often derived from,
or dependent upon, the entity’s ongoing activities that support or
maintain the value of the intellectual property.
Accordingly, if the intellectual property to which the customer has rights has
significant stand-alone functionality, a substantial portion of the benefit of
that intellectual property is derived from that functionality. Consequently, the
ability of the customer to obtain benefit from that intellectual property would
not be significantly affected by the entity’s activities unless those activities
significantly change its form or functionality. Types of intellectual property
that often have significant stand-alone functionality include software,
biological compounds or drug formulas, and completed media content (for
example, films, television shows and music recordings).
If the criteria in paragraph B58 are met, an entity shall account for the
promise to grant a licence as a performance obligation satisfied over time
because the customer will simultaneously receive and consume the benefit
from the entity’s performance of providing access to its intellectual property
as the performance occurs (see paragraph 35(a)). An entity shall apply
paragraphs 39–45 to select an appropriate method to measure its progress
towards complete satisfaction of that performance obligation to provide
access.
If the criteria in paragraph B58 are not met, the nature of an entity’s promise
is to provide a right to use the entity’s intellectual property as that intellectual
property exists (in terms of form and functionality) at the point in time at
which the licence is granted to the customer. This means that the customer
can direct the use of, and obtain substantially all of the remaining benefits from, the licence at the point in time at which the licence transfers. An entity
shall account for the promise to provide a right to use the entity’s intellectual
property as a performance obligation satisfied at a point in time. An entity
shall apply paragraph 38 to determine the point in time at which the licence
transfers to the customer. However, revenue cannot be recognised for a
licence that provides a right to use the entity’s intellectual property before the
beginning of the period during which the customer is able to use and benefit
from the licence. For example, if a software licence period begins before an
entity provides (or otherwise makes available) to the customer a code that
enables the customer to immediately use the software, the entity would not
recognise revenue before that code has been provided (or otherwise made
available).
An entity shall disregard the following factors when determining whether a
licence provides a right to access the entity’s intellectual property or a right to
use the entity’s intellectual property:
(a) Restrictions of time, geographical region or use—those restrictions
define the attributes of the promised licence, rather than define
whether the entity satisfies its performance obligation at a point in
time or over time.
(b) Guarantees provided by the entity that it has a valid patent to
intellectual property and that it will defend that patent from
unauthorised use—a promise to defend a patent right is not a
performance obligation because the act of defending a patent protects
the value of the entity’s intellectual property assets and provides
assurance to the customer that the licence transferred meets the
specifications of the licence promised in the contract.

Sales-based or usage-based royalties


Notwithstanding the requirements in paragraphs 56–59, an entity shall
recognise revenue for a sales-based or usage-based royalty promised in
exchange for a licence of intellectual property only when (or as) the later of
the following events occurs:
(a) the subsequent sale or usage occurs; and
(b) the performance obligation to which some or all of the sales-based or
usage-based royalty has been allocated has been satisfied (or partially
satisfied).
The requirement for a sales-based or usage-based royalty in paragraph B63
applies when the royalty relates only to a licence of intellectual property or
when a licence of intellectual property is the predominant item to which the
royalty relates (for example, the licence of intellectual property may be the
predominant item to which the royalty relates when the entity has a
reasonable expectation that the customer would ascribe significantly more
value to the licence than to the other goods or services to which the royalty
relates).

When the requirement in paragraph B63A is met, revenue from a sales-based
or usage-based royalty shall be recognised wholly in accordance with
paragraph B63. When the requirement in paragraph B63A is not met, the
requirements on variable consideration in paragraphs 50–59 apply to the
sales-based or usage-based royalty.

Repurchase agreements


A repurchase agreement is a contract in which an entity sells an asset and also
promises or has the option (either in the same contract or in another contract)
to repurchase the asset. The repurchased asset may be the asset that was
originally sold to the customer, an asset that is substantially the same as that
asset, or another asset of which the asset that was originally sold is a
component.
Repurchase agreements generally come in three forms:
(a) an entity’s obligation to repurchase the asset (a forward);
(b) an entity’s right to repurchase the asset (a call option); and
(c) an entity’s obligation to repurchase the asset at the customer’s request
(a put option).

A forward or a call option


If an entity has an obligation or a right to repurchase the asset (a forward or a
call option), a customer does not obtain control of the asset because the
customer is limited in its ability to direct the use of, and obtain substantially
all of the remaining benefits from, the asset even though the customer may
have physical possession of the asset. Consequently, the entity shall account
for the contract as either of the following:
(a) a lease in accordance with IFRS 16 Leases if the entity can or must
repurchase the asset for an amount that is less than the original selling
price of the asset, unless the contract is part of a sale and leaseback
transaction. If the contract is part of a sale and leaseback transaction,
the entity shall continue to recognise the asset and shall recognise a
financial liability for any consideration received from the customer.
The entity shall account for the financial liability in accordance with
IFRS 9; or
(b) a financing arrangement in accordance with paragraph B68 if the
entity can or must repurchase the asset for an amount that is equal to
or more than the original selling price of the asset.
When comparing the repurchase price with the selling price, an entity shall
consider the time value of money.
If the repurchase agreement is a financing arrangement, the entity shall
continue to recognise the asset and also recognise a financial liability for any
consideration received from the customer. The entity shall recognise the
difference between the amount of consideration received from the customer and the amount of consideration to be paid to the customer as interest and, if
applicable, as processing or holding costs (for example, insurance).
If the option lapses unexercised, an entity shall derecognise the liability and
recognise revenue.

A put option


If an entity has an obligation to repurchase the asset at the customer’s request
(a put option) at a price that is lower than the original selling price of the
asset, the entity shall consider at contract inception whether the customer has
a significant economic incentive to exercise that right. The customer’s
exercising of that right results in the customer effectively paying the entity
consideration for the right to use a specified asset for a period of time.
Therefore, if the customer has a significant economic incentive to exercise
that right, the entity shall account for the agreement as a lease in accordance
with IFRS 16, unless the contract is part of a sale and leaseback transaction. If
the contract is part of a sale and leaseback transaction, the entity shall
continue to recognise the asset and shall recognise a financial liability for any
consideration received from the customer. The entity shall account for the
financial liability in accordance with IFRS 9.
To determine whether a customer has a significant economic incentive to
exercise its right, an entity shall consider various factors, including the
relationship of the repurchase price to the expected market value of the asset
at the date of the repurchase and the amount of time until the right expires.
For example, if the repurchase price is expected to significantly exceed the
market value of the asset, this may indicate that the customer has a
significant economic incentive to exercise the put option.
If the customer does not have a significant economic incentive to exercise its
right at a price that is lower than the original selling price of the asset, the
entity shall account for the agreement as if it were the sale of a product with a
right of return as described in paragraphs B20–B27.
If the repurchase price of the asset is equal to or greater than the original
selling price and is more than the expected market value of the asset, the
contract is in effect a financing arrangement and, therefore, shall be
accounted for as described in paragraph B68.
If the repurchase price of the asset is equal to or greater than the original
selling price and is less than or equal to the expected market value of the
asset, and the customer does not have a significant economic incentive to
exercise its right, then the entity shall account for the agreement as if it were
the sale of a product with a right of return as described in paragraphs
B20–B27.
When comparing the repurchase price with the selling price, an entity shall
consider the time value of money.
If the option lapses unexercised, an entity shall derecognise the liability and
recognise revenue.

Consignment arrangements


When an entity delivers a product to another party (such as a dealer or a
distributor) for sale to end customers, the entity shall evaluate whether that
other party has obtained control of the product at that point in time. A
product that has been delivered to another party may be held in a
consignment arrangement if that other party has not obtained control of the
product. Accordingly, an entity shall not recognise revenue upon delivery of a
product to another party if the delivered product is held on consignment.
Indicators that an arrangement is a consignment arrangement include, but
are not limited to, the following:
(a) the product is controlled by the entity until a specified event occurs,
such as the sale of the product to a customer of the dealer or until a
specified period expires;
(b) the entity is able to require the return of the product or transfer the
product to a third party (such as another dealer); and
(c) the dealer does not have an unconditional obligation to pay for the
product (although it might be required to pay a deposit).

Bill-and-hold arrangements


A bill-and-hold arrangement is a contract under which an entity bills a
customer for a product but the entity retains physical possession of the
product until it is transferred to the customer at a point in time in the future.
For example, a customer may request an entity to enter into such a contract
because of the customer’s lack of available space for the product or because of
delays in the customer’s production schedules.
An entity shall determine when it has satisfied its performance obligation to
transfer a product by evaluating when a customer obtains control of that
product (see paragraph 38). For some contracts, control is transferred either
when the product is delivered to the customer’s site or when the product is
shipped, depending on the terms of the contract (including delivery and
shipping terms). However, for some contracts, a customer may obtain control
of a product even though that product remains in an entity’s physical
possession. In that case, the customer has the ability to direct the use of, and
obtain substantially all of the remaining benefits from, the product even
though it has decided not to exercise its right to take physical possession of
that product. Consequently, the entity does not control the product. Instead,
the entity provides custodial services to the customer over the customer’s
asset.
In addition to applying the requirements in paragraph 38, for a customer to
have obtained control of a product in a bill-and-hold arrangement, all of the
following criteria must be met:
(a) the reason for the bill-and-hold arrangement must be substantive
(for example, the customer has requested the arrangement);

(b) the product must be identified separately as belonging to the
customer;
(c) the product currently must be ready for physical transfer to the
customer; and
(d) the entity cannot have the ability to use the product or to direct it to
another customer.
If an entity recognises revenue for the sale of a product on a bill-and-hold
basis, the entity shall consider whether it has remaining performance
obligations (for example, for custodial services) in accordance with
paragraphs 22–30 to which the entity shall allocate a portion of the
transaction price in accordance with paragraphs 73–86.

Customer acceptance


In accordance with paragraph 38(e), a customer’s acceptance of an asset may
indicate that the customer has obtained control of the asset. Customer
acceptance clauses allow a customer to cancel a contract or require an entity
to take remedial action if a good or service does not meet agreed-upon
specifications. An entity shall consider such clauses when evaluating when a
customer obtains control of a good or service.
If an entity can objectively determine that control of a good or service has
been transferred to the customer in accordance with the agreed-upon
specifications in the contract, then customer acceptance is a formality that
would not affect the entity’s determination of when the customer has
obtained control of the good or service. For example, if the customer
acceptance clause is based on meeting specified size and weight
characteristics, an entity would be able to determine whether those criteria
have been met before receiving confirmation of the customer’s acceptance.
The entity’s experience with contracts for similar goods or services may
provide evidence that a good or service provided to the customer is in
accordance with the agreed-upon specifications in the contract. If revenue is
recognised before customer acceptance, the entity still must consider whether
there are any remaining performance obligations (for example, installation of
equipment) and evaluate whether to account for them separately.
However, if an entity cannot objectively determine that the good or service
provided to the customer is in accordance with the agreed-upon specifications
in the contract, then the entity would not be able to conclude that the
customer has obtained control until the entity receives the customer’s
acceptance. That is because in that circumstance the entity cannot determine
that the customer has the ability to direct the use of, and obtain substantially
all of the remaining benefits from, the good or service.
If an entity delivers products to a customer for trial or evaluation purposes
and the customer is not committed to pay any consideration until the trial
period lapses, control of the product is not transferred to the customer until
either the customer accepts the product or the trial period lapses.

Disclosure of disaggregated revenue


Paragraph 114 requires an entity to disaggregate revenue from contracts with
customers into categories that depict how the nature, amount, timing and
uncertainty of revenue and cash flows are affected by economic factors.
Consequently, the extent to which an entity’s revenue is disaggregated for the
purposes of this disclosure depends on the facts and circumstances that
pertain to the entity’s contracts with customers. Some entities may need to
use more than one type of category to meet the objective in paragraph 114 for
disaggregating revenue. Other entities may meet the objective by using only
one type of category to disaggregate revenue.
When selecting the type of category (or categories) to use to disaggregate
revenue, an entity shall consider how information about the entity’s revenue
has been presented for other purposes, including all of the following:
(a) disclosures presented outside the financial statements (for example, in
earnings releases, annual reports or investor presentations);
(b) information regularly reviewed by the chief operating decision maker
for evaluating the financial performance of operating segments; and
(c) other information that is similar to the types of information identified
in paragraph B88(a) and (b) and that is used by the entity or users of
the entity’s financial statements to evaluate the entity’s financial
performance or make resource allocation decisions.
Examples of categories that might be appropriate include, but are not limited
to, all of the following:
(a) type of good or service (for example, major product lines);
(b) geographical region (for example, country or region);

(c) market or type of customer (for example, government and non-
government customers);

(d) type of contract (for example, fixed-price and time-and-materials
contracts);
(e) contract duration (for example, short-term and long-term contracts);
(f) timing of transfer of goods or services (for example, revenue from
goods or services transferred to customers at a point in time and
revenue from goods or services transferred over time); and
(g) sales channels (for example, goods sold directly to consumers and
goods sold through intermediaries).

Appendix C
Effective date and transition


This appendix is an integral part of the Standard and has the same authority as the other parts of the
Standard.

Effective date


An entity shall apply this Standard for annual reporting periods beginning on
or after 1 January 2018. Earlier application is permitted. If an entity applies
this Standard earlier, it shall disclose that fact.
IFRS 16 Leases, issued in January 2016, amended paragraphs 5, 97, B66 and
B70. An entity shall apply those amendments when it applies IFRS 16.
Clarifications to IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers, issued in April
2016, amended paragraphs 26, 27, 29, B1, B34–B38, B52–B53, B58, C2, C5 and
C7, deleted paragraph B57 and added paragraphs B34A, B35A, B35B, B37A,
B59A, B63A, B63B, C7A and C8A. An entity shall apply those amendments for
annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2018. Earlier
application is permitted. If an entity applies those amendments for an earlier
period, it shall disclose that fact.
IFRS 17, issued in May 2017, amended paragraph 5. An entity shall apply that
amendment when it applies IFRS 17.

Transition


For the purposes of the transition requirements in paragraphs C3–C8A:
(a) the date of initial application is the start of the reporting period in
which an entity first applies this Standard; and
(b) a completed contract is a contract for which the entity has transferred
all of the goods or services identified in accordance with IAS 11
Construction Contracts, IAS 18 Revenue and related Interpretations.
An entity shall apply this Standard using one of the following two methods:
(a) retrospectively to each prior reporting period presented in accordance
with IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors,
subject to the expedients in paragraph C5; or
(b) retrospectively with the cumulative effect of initially applying this
Standard recognised at the date of initial application in accordance
with paragraphs C7–C8.
Notwithstanding the requirements of paragraph 28 of IAS 8, when this
Standard is first applied, an entity need only present the quantitative
information required by paragraph 28(f) of IAS 8 for the annual period
immediately preceding the first annual period for which this Standard is
applied (the ‘immediately preceding period’) and only if the entity applies this
Standard retrospectively in accordance with paragraph C3(a). An entity may

also present this information for the current period or for earlier comparative
periods, but is not required to do so.
An entity may use one or more of the following practical expedients when
applying this Standard retrospectively in accordance with paragraph C3(a):
(a) for completed contracts, an entity need not restate contracts that:
(i) begin and end within the same annual reporting period; or
(ii) are completed contracts at the beginning of the earliest period
presented.

(b) for completed contracts that have variable consideration, an entity
may use the transaction price at the date the contract was completed
rather than estimating variable consideration amounts in the
comparative reporting periods.
(c) for contracts that were modified before the beginning of the earliest
period presented, an entity need not retrospectively restate the
contract for those contract modifications in accordance with
paragraphs 20–21. Instead, an entity shall reflect the aggregate effect
of all of the modifications that occur before the beginning of the
earliest period presented when:
(i) identifying the satisfied and unsatisfied performance
obligations;
(ii) determining the transaction price; and
(iii) allocating the transaction price to the satisfied and unsatisfied
performance obligations.

(d) for all reporting periods presented before the date of initial
application, an entity need not disclose the amount of the transaction
price allocated to the remaining performance obligations and an
explanation of when the entity expects to recognise that amount as
revenue (see paragraph 120).
For any of the practical expedients in paragraph C5 that an entity uses, the
entity shall apply that expedient consistently to all contracts within all
reporting periods presented. In addition, the entity shall disclose all of the
following information:
(a) the expedients that have been used; and
(b) to the extent reasonably possible, a qualitative assessment of the
estimated effect of applying each of those expedients.
If an entity elects to apply this Standard retrospectively in accordance with
paragraph C3(b), the entity shall recognise the cumulative effect of initially
applying this Standard as an adjustment to the opening balance of retained
earnings (or other component of equity, as appropriate) of the annual
reporting period that includes the date of initial application. Under this
transition method, an entity may elect to apply this Standard retrospectively
only to contracts that are not completed contracts at the date of initial application (for example, 1 January 2018 for an entity with a 31 December
year-end).
An entity applying this Standard retrospectively in accordance with
paragraph C3(b) may also use the practical expedient described in
paragraph C5(c), either:
(a) for all contract modifications that occur before the beginning of the
earliest period presented; or
(b) for all contract modifications that occur before the date of initial
application.
If an entity uses this practical expedient, the entity shall apply the expedient
consistently to all contracts and disclose the information required by
paragraph C6.
For reporting periods that include the date of initial application, an entity
shall provide both of the following additional disclosures if this Standard is
applied retrospectively in accordance with paragraph C3(b):
(a) the amount by which each financial statement line item is affected in
the current reporting period by the application of this Standard as
compared to IAS 11, IAS 18 and related Interpretations that were in
effect before the change; and
(b) an explanation of the reasons for significant changes identified in
C8(a).
An entity shall apply Clarifications to IFRS 15 (see paragraph C1B) retrospectively
in accordance with IAS 8. In applying the amendments retrospectively, an
entity shall apply the amendments as if they had been included in IFRS 15 at
the date of initial application. Consequently, an entity does not apply the
amendments to reporting periods or to contracts to which the requirements of
IFRS 15 are not applied in accordance with paragraphs C2–C8. For example, if
an entity applies IFRS 15 in accordance with paragraph C3(b) only to contracts
that are not completed contracts at the date of initial application, the entity
does not restate the completed contracts at the date of initial application of
IFRS 15 for the effects of these amendments.

References to IFRS 9


If an entity applies this Standard but does not yet apply IFRS 9 Financial
Instruments, any reference in this Standard to IFRS 9 shall be read as a
reference to IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement.

Withdrawal of other Standards


This Standard supersedes the following Standards:
(a) IAS 11 Construction Contracts;
(b) IAS 18 Revenue;
(c) IFRIC 13 Customer Loyalty Programmes;

(d) IFRIC 15 Agreements for the Construction of Real Estate;
(e) IFRIC 18 Transfers of Assets from Customers; and
(f) SIC-31 Revenue—Barter Transactions Involving Advertising Services.

Appendix D
Amendments to other Standards

This Appendix describes the

amendments to other Standards that the IASB made when it finalised
IFRS 15. An entity shall apply the amendments for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January
2018. If an entity applies IFRS 15 for an earlier period, these amendments shall be applied for that
earlier period.

* * * * *

The amendments contained in this appendix when this Standard was issued in 2014 have been
incorporated into the text of the relevant Standards included in this volume.

Approval by the Board of IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with
Customers issued in May 2014


IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers was approved for issue by all sixteen
members of the International Accounting Standards Board.1
Hans Hoogervorst Chairman
Ian Mackintosh Vice-Chairman
Stephen Cooper
Philippe Danjou
Martin Edelmann
Jan Engström
Patrick Finnegan
Gary Kabureck
Suzanne Lloyd
Amaro Luiz de Oliveira Gomes
Patricia McConnell
Takatsugu Ochi
Darrel Scott
Chungwoo Suh
Mary Tokar
Wei-Guo Zhang

Approval by the Board of Effective Date of IFRS 15 issued in
September 2015


Effective Date of IFRS 15 was approved for publication by the fourteen members of the
International Accounting Standards Board.
Hans Hoogervorst Chairman
Ian Mackintosh Vice-Chairman
Stephen Cooper
Philippe Danjou
Amaro Luiz De Oliveira Gomes
Martin Edelmann
Patrick Finnegan
Gary Kabureck
Suzanne Lloyd
Takatsugu Ochi
Darrel Scott
Chungwoo Suh
Mary Tokar
Wei-Guo Zhang

Approval by the Board of Clarifications to IFRS 15 Revenue from
Contracts with Customers issued in April 2016


Clarifications to IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers was approved for issue by
thirteen of the fourteen members of the International Accounting Standards Board.
Mr Ochi dissented. His dissenting opinion is set out after the Basis for Conclusions.
Hans Hoogervorst Chairman
Ian Mackintosh Vice-Chairman
Stephen Cooper
Philippe Danjou
Martin Edelmann
Patrick Finnegan
Amaro Gomes
Gary Kabureck
Suzanne Lloyd
Takatsugu Ochi
Darrel Scott
Chungwoo Suh
Mary Tokar
Wei-Guo Zhang