FASB Finalizes ASU to Dissagregate Income Statement Expenses

BY ACCESSING THE FASB DOCUMENTS ON THIS SITE, YOU ACCEPT AND AGREE TO THESE FASB TERMS AND THE WEBSITE TERMS AS APPLIED TO YOUR USE OF THIS SITE OR ANY FASB LICENSED DOCUMENTS.


Summary

Based on investor and other constituent feedback requests for more information about income statement expenses, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) introduced guidance requiring expanded disclosures for public business entities (as defined in U.S. GAAP) about specific income statement expenses in Accounting Standards Update (ASU) No. 2024-03: Income Statement — Reporting Comprehensive  Income — Expense Disaggregation Disclosures (Subtopic 220-40): Disaggregation of Income Statement Expenses. 

This Bulletin summarizes the ASU, including the new disclosure requirements and effective dates. This ASU does not change income statement presentation requirements but instead expands the disclosure requirements for specific costs and expenses.


Background

The ASU’s primary goal is to provide greater transparency about the components of specific expense categories in the income statement. Before this ASU, Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) Topic 220, Income Statement — Reporting Comprehensive Income, did not require separate presentation of specific expense captions unless required by industry-specific guidance or upon a triggering event (such as a goodwill impairment).

In finalizing the ASU, the FASB affirmed many of the positions set forth in its July 2023 proposal, while also incorporating stakeholder feedback.


Main Provisions

This ASU requires public business entities (PBEs) to provide expanded disclosures about specific expense categories in interim and annual reporting periods, as summarized below:

MAIN PROVISIONSUMMARY OF DISCLOSURES FOR INTERIM AND ANNUAL REPORTING PERIODS FOR PBES

Expanded Expense Disclosures

Disclose in a tabular format in the notes to the financial statements amounts recognized in each relevant expense caption in the income statement in continuing operations for:

  • Purchases of inventory1 using the expense or cost-incurred approach
  • Employee compensation2
  • Depreciation
  • Intangible asset amortization
  • Depreciation, depletion and amortization recognized as part of oil and gas-producing activities (DD&A)

A relevant expense caption is one that is presented on the face of the income statement and includes any of the expenses listed above.

Tabular Integration of Existing Disclosure Requirements

Include existing required disclosures for specific expenses, gains, and losses in the newly required tabular format if the expense is reported in a relevant expense caption. Examples include:

  • Expenses, such as write-offs of in-process research and development assets acquired in an asset acquisition and impairment losses from intangibles or long-lived assets held and used.
  • Gains and losses arising from assets classified as held for sale, derivative instruments, and the deconsolidation of a subsidiary.

However, other existing U.S. GAAP disclosure requirements are required to be disclosed in the tabular format only if the entire expense is included in a single relevant expense caption. Examples include disclosure of operating lease costs, warranty expense, gain on troubled debt restructuring, and foreign currency transaction gains or losses.

This requirement does not result in new disclosures; rather, the ASU changes the presentation of these disclosures. For a full listing of the expenses, gains or losses that may need to be included in the tabular format, please refer to ASC 220-40-50-21 through 50-22. 

Expense Reimbursements Included in a Relevant Expense Caption

Disclose expense reimbursements included in any relevant expense captions such as those reimbursed under shared research and development contracts. Any reimbursements may be presented in the tabular format as a separate line item or net within the relevant expense category with separate disclosure.

Other Items Remaining in Relevant Expense Captions

Include an amount for “other items,” which is the difference between the total relevant expense caption on the income statement and the aggregate of separately disclosed expense categories. Describe qualitatively what is included in this amount.

Selling Expenses

Disclose the total selling expenses recognized in continuing operations in the notes to financial statements.3


A PBE also may provide voluntary disclosures in the tabular format to offer investors decision-useful information, if that information is not combined with the required, disaggregated disclosures.

The disclosure requirements must be applied consistently across all periods presented. If the PBE alters its display of these requirements because of a change in the election of an alternative or a change in the definition of a disclosure, the PBE must:

  • Disclose the reason for the change.
  • Recast the prior periods presented for comparative purposes, unless impracticable. If it is impracticable to recast the prior periods, the entity must also explain why.


Analyze the Disclosure Requirements and Adjust Recordkeeping and Estimation Processes

Producing the information necessary to comply with the new disaggregated expenses disclosure may require detailed recordkeeping. The FASB acknowledged that this process may be challenging for some entities if their financial reporting systems do not currently track information using the categories required by the ASU. Therefore, the ASU explicitly allows entities to use estimates or other methods that reasonably approximate the required disclosure amounts. Nonetheless, updating recordkeeping and estimation processes may require significant time, and PBEs should begin the implementation process as soon as possible.


The Appendix provides examples of these new, disaggregated disclosure requirements.


Effective Dates and Transition

The following table summarizes the effective dates and transition for the ASU for public business entities:

APPLICABLE ONLY TO PUBLIC BUSINESS ENTITIES

Effective Date

Annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2026.

Interim reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2027.

Early Adoption

Allowed.

Transition

Prospectively in financial statements issued after the effective date.

or

Retrospectively to any or all prior periods presented in the financial statements.


Read the full ASU 2024-03.

The experienced professionals in BDO’s Accounting Advisory practice can help navigate the complexities of applying U.S. GAAP and adopting new accounting guidance.



1 As a practical expedient, when substantially all of a PBE’s expense caption is based on purchases of inventory (excluding any amounts recognized from a business combination, joint venture formation or initial consolidation of a variable interest entity), the entity may elect to quantitatively describe the make-up of the expense caption in interim and annual reporting periods rather than providing the required quantitative disclosures.

2 As a practical expedient, a PBE that presents an expense caption for salaries and employee benefits on the face of its financial statement in accordance with ASC 942-330-S99-1 may use those amounts to comply with this ASU.

3 A PBE is required to define what constitutes its selling expenses only in annual reporting periods. If that definition changes, the entity is required to update that definition in its interim disclosures in the period of change and recast the prior periods presented for comparative purposes unless impracticable.