FASB delays revenue recognition effective date by one year

Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 2015. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.

Citing challenges for financial statement preparers, the US Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) voted Thursday to delay the effective date of the new revenue recognition standard by one year, with early adoption permitted as of the original effective date.

As a result of the delay, public business entities, certain not-for-profit entities, and certain employee benefit plans would apply the new revenue recognition standard in annual reporting periods beginning after December 15th 2017, including interim reporting periods within that reporting period. Earlier application would be permitted only as of annual reporting periods beginning after December 15th 2016, including interim reporting periods within that reporting period.

All other entities would have an additional year for implementation, applying the guidance to annual reporting periods beginning after December 15th 2018 and interim reporting periods within annual reporting periods beginning after December 15th 2019. Application for all other entities would be permitted earlier only as of an annual reporting period beginning after December 15th 2016, including interim reporting periods within that reporting period; or an annual reporting period beginning after December 15th 2016 and interim reporting periods within annual reporting periods beginning one year after the annual reporting period in which an entity first applies the new guidance.

The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) also has proposed a one-year delay in its new revenue recognition standard, which is converged with FASB’s after the boards participated in a lengthy joint standard-setting process.

When implemented, the standard will provide more principles-based guidance for recognising revenue than companies that report under US GAAP are accustomed to. The new standard was designed to create comparability across industries and jurisdictions with the convergence of US GAAP and IFRS.

FASB’s delay came about because financial statement preparers voiced concerns about not having enough time to implement the standard. The release of the standard was delayed several months before its issuance in May 2014. Since the standard’s issuance, FASB and the IASB have proposed several changes to it in response to preparers’ questions about the guidance.

Preparers were concerned about the delayed issuance, the timing of the proposed changes, a lack of available IT solutions, and difficulty implementing internal controls amid the uncertainty.

These concerns were serious enough that FASB members Daryl Buck and Hal Schroeder voted Thursday for a two-year delay in the standard, but they were outvoted by their colleagues. FASB members Tom Linsmeier and Larry Smith said they did not expect that the IASB would consider a two-year delay, and added that convergence in the US GAAP and IFRS effective dates is a major point of advocacy for multinational companies.

Linsmeier and Smith also said a two-year delay might cause preparers to lose their momentum in implementation.

FASB member Marc Siegel voted not to permit early adoption but was outvoted by his peers. He is concerned that comparability will suffer when companies implement at different times.

“To have incomparable revenue is an extremely difficult thing for an investor to understand,” Siegel said.

Linsmeier said permitting early adoption would save costs for companies that are ready as of the initial effective date but said he does not expect many companies to elect the early adoption option.

“I don’t know that there are going to be a lot of companies that go early,” he said.

Ken Tysiac (ktysiac@aicpa.org) is a CGMA Magazine editorial director.

Up Next

FP&A stimulates economic confidence amidst trade shocks

By Steph Brown
September 10, 2025
FP&A capabilities continue to increase in importance for finance teams, partly through the ability to predict emerging tariff developments.
Advertisement

LATEST STORIES

FP&A stimulates economic confidence amidst trade shocks

Looking inward: A mindful approach to regulating stress, uncertainty

5 ways AI augments the accountant’s role

Cost concerns considerably restrict UK hiring and pay growth

With greenhouse gas reporting, sizable gaps persist

Advertisement
Read the latest FM digital edition, exclusively for CIMA members and AICPA members who hold the CGMA designation.
Advertisement

Related Articles

5 ways AI augments the accountant’s role