Executive Summary
IFRS 18 represents one of the most important developments in financial statement presentation in recent years. While the standard does not alter how transactions are recognised or measured, it introduces a more structured and disciplined approach to how financial performance is presented and communicated.
For many organisations, the impact of IFRS 18 will not be immediately visible in the numbers themselves. Instead, it will be reflected in how those numbers are organised, interpreted, and compared. The introduction of defined categories within the statement of profit or loss, the formalisation of operating profit, and the regulation of management-defined performance measures collectively aim to improve comparability across entities.
However, IFRS 18 does not eliminate judgment. In fact, it places greater responsibility on management to make consistent and well-supported classification decisions. As a result, the transition to IFRS 18 is not merely a reporting exercise. It requires finance teams to reassess internal structures, rethink presentation logic, and ensure that financial communication remains clear and credible.
The table below summarises the key changes introduced by IFRS 18 and their practical implications for finance teams:
| Area | Before IFRS 18 | After IFRS 18 | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Income Statement Structure | Flexible presentation with limited standardisation | Introduction of defined categories (Operating, Investing, Financing) | Improves comparability and consistency across entities |
| Operating Profit | Not consistently defined across companies | Introduced as a defined subtotal | Provides a standard measure of core business performance |
| Management Performance Measures (MPMs) | Informal, often inconsistently defined | Formal disclosure with mandatory reconciliation to IFRS numbers | Enhances transparency and reduces ambiguity in adjusted metrics |
| Classification of Income & Expenses | Greater flexibility in classification | Structured classification based on nature of activity | Requires stronger judgment and documentation |
| Aggregation & Disaggregation | Limited guidance, often inconsistent | Clearer principles on meaningful grouping and breakdown | Improves clarity and usefulness of financial statements |
| Disclosure Requirements | Varying levels of detail across entities | Enhanced disclosure, especially around performance measures | Increases accountability and audit scrutiny |
| Comparability Across Companies | Limited due to varied presentation practices | Significantly improved due to standardised structure | Better benchmarking and investor understanding |
| Role of Judgment | Present but less visible | More explicit and central to classification decisions | Greater focus on consistency and audit review |
| Internal Reporting Alignment | Often different from external reporting | Need for alignment with IFRS presentation structure | Impacts chart of accounts, ERP systems, and reporting processes |
Background and Objective
One of the longstanding challenges in financial reporting has been the lack of consistency in how companies present their financial performance. Although recognition and measurement principles are governed by well-defined standards, presentation has historically allowed a degree of flexibility.
This flexibility has led to a wide range of practices. Companies often present operating profit, EBITDA, or adjusted earnings in different ways, sometimes with limited transparency around how these measures are derived. As a result, users of financial statements—particularly investors and analysts—are required to interpret and reconcile these measures themselves.
IFRS 18 seeks to address this issue by introducing a more structured framework for presentation. The objective is not to restrict communication, but to ensure that it is more transparent, comparable, and disciplined.
Structured Statement of Profit or Loss
IFRS 18 introduces a more structured and standardized presentation of the profit and loss statement, significantly enhancing comparability and transparency. The most notable change is the mandatory classification of income and expenses into defined categories—operating, investing, and financing—along with the introduction of new required subtotals such as operating profit. This reduces flexibility previously available under IAS 1 and limits inconsistencies in how entities present performance. Overall, the standard shifts the P&L from a largely principles-based format to a more disciplined and comparable structure, improving its usefulness for users in analyzing financial performance.
In practice, this means that entities must now carefully evaluate the nature of each income and expense item and determine its appropriate classification. This evaluation is not purely mechanical. It requires an understanding of the underlying business model and the role that each activity plays within it.
For example, income arising from core business operations would typically fall within the operating category. In contrast, returns from investments or interest income may be classified within the investing category. Similarly, expenses related to borrowings would generally be included within the financing category.
While the framework appears straightforward, its application can be complex, particularly for businesses with diversified operations or integrated financing activities. The introduction of structure reduces flexibility, but it also requires thoughtful judgment.
An entity will have to classify income and expenses in the Statement of Profit or Loss in one of five categories:
- THE OPERATING CATEGORY
- THE INVESTING CATEGORY
- THE FINANCING CATEGORY
- THE INCOME TAXES CATEGORY
- THE DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS CATEGORY
Operating Profit as a Defined Subtotal
One of the most significant changes introduced by IFRS 18 is the formal definition of operating profit. Historically, operating profit has been presented differently by different entities, often reflecting internal management views rather than a consistent external benchmark.
By defining operating profit, IFRS 18 aims to improve comparability across companies. Users of financial statements can now rely on a more standardised measure of core business performance.
However, the definition of operating profit does not eliminate judgment entirely. The classification of certain income and expense items—particularly those that do not clearly fall within operating or non-operating categories—continues to require careful evaluation.
For instance, in businesses where financing activities are closely linked to operations, determining whether certain income or expenses should be classified as operating or financing can be challenging. The standard provides guidance, but ultimately relies on management’s understanding of the business model.
Defined Classification Categories
The Investing Category
- Income from financial investments: Interest income, dividend income, and similar returns earned on financial assets.
- Gains or losses on investments: Fair value changes, disposals, or impairments relating to investments in financial instruments, investment properties, or other non-core assets.
- Returns from non-core assets: Income and expenses arising from assets that generate returns independently of the entity’s main business operations.
- Share of profit or loss from associates and joint ventures: Included where such investments are not integral to the entity’s core operations.
- Other investment-related items: Any additional items that relate to investing activities rather than operating or financing activities.
The Financing Category
- Interest expense on borrowings: Costs incurred on loans, debentures, bonds, lease liabilities, and other financing arrangements.
- Other finance costs: Charges such as amortisation of transaction costs, unwinding of discounts on provisions, and similar financing-related expenses.
- Income and expenses from financing liabilities: Gains or losses arising from remeasurement or modification of financial liabilities.
- Foreign exchange differences related to financing: Exchange gains or losses attributable to financing activities (e.g., borrowings denominated in foreign currency).
- Effects of financing structure: Items reflecting how the entity is funded (debt vs equity), rather than how it operates.
The Income Taxes Category
- Total tax expense or benefit: Includes both current tax and deferred tax for the period.
- Presented separately from other categories: Shown after operating, investing, and financing to clearly isolate tax effects.
- Reflects jurisdictional and timing impacts: Captures variations due to tax laws, deferred tax adjustments, and one-off tax items.
- Enhances clarity of performance: Enables users to distinguish between pre-tax performance and post-tax results.
The Discontinued Operations Category
- Results of discontinued components: Includes profit or loss of business segments that are disposed of or held for sale.
- Post-tax presentation: Typically presented net of tax, ensuring focus on final impact on shareholders.
- Includes disposal gains or losses: Covers gains or losses arising on the sale or disposal of such operations.
- Separated from continuing operations: Ensures that ongoing performance is not distorted by non-recurring or exited activities.
Typical Statement of Profit and Loss under IFRS 18
ABC Limited
Statement of Profit and Loss for the year ended 31 March 2026
| Particulars | Amount (Rs. lakhs) |
|---|---|
| Operating category | |
| Revenue | 25,000 |
| Other operating income | 1,200 |
| Cost of materials consumed | (10,500) |
| Employee benefits expense | (4,200) |
| Depreciation and amortisation | (1,800) |
| Other operating expenses | (3,500) |
| Operating profit | 6,200 |
| Investing category | |
| Interest income | 300 |
| Dividend income | 150 |
| Gain on sale of investments | 250 |
| Share of profit from associate | 200 |
| Profit before financing and tax | 7,100 |
| Financing category | |
| Interest expense | (900) |
| Lease finance cost | (200) |
| Foreign exchange loss (borrowings) | (150) |
| Profit before tax | 5,850 |
| Income tax | |
| Tax expense | (1,450) |
| Profit for the year | 4,400 |
Management Performance Measures (MPMs)
Another important aspect of IFRS 18 is its treatment of management-defined performance measures. These measures, such as EBITDA or adjusted profit, are widely used by companies to communicate performance.
Under previous practice, these measures were often presented with limited standardisation. IFRS 18 does not prohibit their use, but it introduces a framework to ensure that they are presented transparently.
Entities are now required to clearly define these measures, explain how they are calculated, and reconcile them to the nearest IFRS-defined subtotal. This reconciliation requirement is particularly important, as it allows users to understand the adjustments made and assess their relevance.
In effect, IFRS 18 brings informal performance measures into a more formal and regulated disclosure framework. This enhances credibility, but also increases the responsibility on management to ensure consistency and clarity.
Compliant MPM Disclosure Workflow under IFRS 18
Isolate internal metrics such as EBITDA, Adjusted Profit, or Core Earnings.
Formally document what the metric represents and explicitly list what is included and excluded.
Verify why this metric is used and confirm it accurately reflects management’s view of performance.
Identify non-recurring or non-operating items, ensuring adjustments are consistent and fully justifiable.
Build a step-by-step computation blueprint to ensure replicability and complete transparency.
Map the metrics directly to Operating Profit, Profit Before Tax, or Net Profit through formal logs.
Detail the distinct nature of every adjustment and disclose the explicit reason for exclusion or inclusion.
Incorporate clean presentations with complete cross-referencing to formal IFRS account lines.
Maintain identical data definitions and match the calculation approach year-over-year.
Perform validation tests to ensure external stakeholders can interpret the metrics unambiguously.
Aggregation and Disaggregation
IFRS 18 also places greater emphasis on how financial information is grouped. The standard recognises that both excessive aggregation and excessive disaggregation can reduce the usefulness of financial statements.
If items are aggregated too broadly, important details may be obscured. On the other hand, if information is broken down too finely, it can become difficult for users to identify key trends.
The challenge for finance teams is to strike the right balance. This requires a clear understanding of materiality, as well as consistency in how items are classified and presented over time.
In practice, this may involve revisiting existing reporting formats and ensuring that they provide meaningful insight without unnecessary complexity.
Practical Implications for Finance Functions
Although IFRS 18 does not change how transactions are recorded, it has important implications for how finance functions operate.
- Chart of Accounts Optimization: Existing account architectures may not align neatly with the new category rules, requiring systematic remapping.
- ERP Systems Scalability: ERP frameworks must be updated to capture and report line items dynamically into the new defined categories.
- Internal MIS Re-alignment: Internal management accounting structures must match external structures to eliminate manual quarterly reconciliation effort.
- Stakeholder Communications: Investor relations teams must proactively brief analysts and lenders regarding presentation updates and ratio behaviors.
Key Areas of Judgment & Case Illustration
Despite its structured approach, IFRS 18 continues to rely heavily on judgment. This is particularly evident in the classification of income and expenses. For example, determining whether a particular activity is part of core operations requires an understanding of the business model. Similarly, distinguishing between investing and operating activities may not always be straightforward.
These judgments have a direct impact on key financial metrics, including operating profit and various performance ratios. As a result, it is essential that they are applied consistently and supported by appropriate documentation. In many cases, the robustness of these judgments will be a key focus area during audits.
Practical Illustration
To illustrate the application of IFRS 18, consider a company with manufacturing operations, treasury investments, and external borrowings.
In a straightforward scenario, income from manufacturing would be classified as operating, returns from treasury investments as investing, and interest expense on borrowings as financing. However, the situation becomes more complex if, for example, financing is integral to the company’s business model, or if investments are strategic rather than incidental. In such cases, classification decisions require careful analysis and may differ from initial expectations.
Transition Considerations
Implementing IFRS 18 requires more than a simple reclassification exercise. It involves a comprehensive review of reporting structures, systems, and processes. Organisations may need to redesign their financial statement formats, update internal reporting frameworks, and provide training to finance teams. In addition, clear communication with stakeholders is essential to ensure that the changes are understood. Given the scope of these changes, early preparation is advisable.
Conclusion & Final Insight
IFRS 18 represents a shift in how financial performance is communicated. By introducing structure and discipline, it enhances the clarity and comparability of financial statements. However, the effectiveness of the standard ultimately depends on how it is applied. Consistent classification, thoughtful presentation, and clear communication are essential.
For finance teams, this is not merely a compliance requirement. It is an opportunity to improve the quality of financial reporting and strengthen the way performance is communicated to stakeholders.
Final Insight: The real challenge of IFRS 18 lies not in understanding its principles, but in applying them consistently across diverse business scenarios. That is where strong finance teams will differentiate themselves.
About DoubleEntry Solutions
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