IAS 27 is the IFRS accounting standard that governs separate financial statements. In simple terms, it tells a parent company or investor how to report its investments in subsidiaries, joint ventures, and associates when presenting its own legal-entity accounts rather than full group accounts. That makes IAS 27 important for statutory filings, dividend decisions, lender analysis, and understanding why parent-company numbers can look very different from consolidated results.
1. Term Overview
- Official Term: IAS 27
- Current Standard Title: Separate Financial Statements
- Common Synonyms: International Accounting Standard 27, IAS 27 Separate Financial Statements
- Alternate Spellings / Variants: IAS-27, IAS 27
- Domain / Subdomain: Finance / Accounting Standards and Frameworks
- One-line definition: IAS 27 is the IFRS standard that sets out how an entity accounts for investments in subsidiaries, joint ventures, and associates in separate financial statements.
- Plain-English definition: If a company wants to show its own books as a legal entity, instead of combining all group companies into one set of group accounts, IAS 27 explains how those investments should be shown.
- Why this term matters:
- It helps readers distinguish parent-only numbers from group numbers.
- It matters for dividends, legal reserves, statutory reporting, and covenants.
- It sits at the center of several IFRS topics, especially IFRS 10, IAS 28, IFRS 9, IFRS 12, IFRS 5, and IAS 36.
- It is often tested in accounting exams, interviews, and professional practice.
2. Core Meaning
What it is
IAS 27 is an accounting standard in the IFRS framework. Its focus is separate financial statements, not full consolidation.
A company group can be viewed in two different ways:
- As one economic group
This is shown through consolidated financial statements. - As individual legal entities
This is shown through separate financial statements.
IAS 27 deals with the second view.
Why it exists
A parent company often needs to publish its own legal-entity financial statements for reasons such as:
- company law
- dividend declarations
- tax administration
- lender covenants
- regulatory filings
- governance and stewardship
Without a standard, entities might use inconsistent methods for reporting investments in subsidiaries and other investees. IAS 27 creates a common framework.
What problem it solves
It solves the problem of how to report ownership interests in other entities when those entities are not being consolidated in the statement being prepared.
For example, if Parent Ltd owns 100% of Subsidiary Ltd, should Parent Ltd show:
- all of Subsidiary Ltd’s assets and liabilities line by line, or
- a single “investment in subsidiary” line?
In separate financial statements, IAS 27 says the second approach applies, subject to the permitted measurement basis.
Who uses it
IAS 27 is used by:
- parent companies
- holding companies
- companies with associates or joint ventures
- CFOs and controllers
- auditors
- regulators
- lenders
- investors and analysts
- accounting students and exam candidates
Where it appears in practice
You will typically see IAS 27 in:
- annual reports with both consolidated and separate sections
- statutory parent-company accounts
- listed holding company filings
- loan covenant reviews
- dividend planning documents
- board papers on legal-entity capital and reserves
3. Detailed Definition
Formal definition
IAS 27 prescribes the accounting and disclosure requirements for investments in subsidiaries, joint ventures, and associates when an entity prepares separate financial statements.
Technical definition
Under IAS 27, when separate financial statements are prepared, investments in:
- subsidiaries
- joint ventures
- associates
are accounted for using one of the permitted approaches:
- at cost
- in accordance with IFRS 9
- using the equity method as described in IAS 28
The same accounting basis must generally be applied within each category of investment.
Operational definition
In practice, IAS 27 means the entity should:
- Identify whether it is preparing separate rather than consolidated financial statements.
- Identify whether each investee is a: – subsidiary – joint venture – associate
- Choose the accounting basis for each category.
- Apply related rules on: – dividends – impairment – fair value measurement – held-for-sale classification – disclosures
Context-specific definitions
Under the current IFRS structure
Today, IAS 27 is primarily about separate financial statements.
In older textbooks or legacy references
Historically, IAS 27 also covered consolidated financial statements. That is a common source of confusion. Under the modern IFRS architecture, IFRS 10 is the main consolidation standard, while IAS 27 covers separate financial statements.
By geography
- International / IFRS jurisdictions: IAS 27 applies where IFRS Accounting Standards are used or adopted.
- India: The equivalent standard is generally Ind AS 27, which is closely aligned but should be checked against Indian law and current regulatory requirements.
- US: IAS 27 does not apply under US GAAP; similar issues are handled under different standards.
4. Etymology / Origin / Historical Background
Origin of the term
- IAS stands for International Accounting Standard.
- 27 is simply the standard number assigned within the IAS series.
Historical development
IAS 27 comes from the international push to standardize how groups and parent companies report ownership in other entities.
How usage has changed over time
The meaning of “IAS 27” has changed in practice:
- Earlier use: It was strongly associated with both consolidation and separate financial statements.
- Current use: It is mainly associated with separate financial statements.
Important milestones
| Period | Milestone | Why it mattered |
|---|---|---|
| Late 1980s | IAS 27 emerged in the international standards framework | Formalized reporting for group and parent-company contexts |
| 2003 revision | Standard was updated substantially | Improved clarity and consistency |
| 2008 amendments | Changes aligned with business combination reforms | Better fit with evolving IFRS group-accounting logic |
| 2011 restructuring | Consolidation guidance moved largely to IFRS 10; IAS 27 became Separate Financial Statements | This is the biggest modern change |
| 2014 amendment | Equity method option permitted in separate financial statements | Added flexibility for reporting investments |
Why the history matters
If you read old study notes or older annual reports, “IAS 27” may appear to mean something broader than it does today. Always interpret the term in the context of the reporting date.
5. Conceptual Breakdown
5.1 Separate financial statements
Meaning: Financial statements of a parent or investor presented on its own legal-entity basis.
Role: They show the financial position and performance of the reporting entity itself, not the full group.
Interaction with other components: Instead of line-by-line consolidation, the entity reports investments in other entities under an approved basis.
Practical importance: These statements are often crucial for legal, tax, and financing purposes.
5.2 Investments covered
IAS 27 applies to investments in:
- Subsidiaries — controlled entities
- Associates — entities over which significant influence exists
- Joint ventures — arrangements with joint control and rights to net assets
Role: These are the investment types most relevant to corporate structures.
Practical importance: Correct classification affects which standard applies and how measurement works.
5.3 Measurement bases
IAS 27 allows three broad bases in separate financial statements:
- Cost
- IFRS 9 measurement
- Equity method under IAS 28
Role: These options provide flexibility depending on the reporting objective.
Practical importance: The choice can significantly change profit, equity, and volatility.
5.4 Category consistency
An entity applies the same accounting basis for each category of investments.
Meaning: All subsidiaries should generally be accounted for on the same basis in separate financial statements, all associates on the same basis, and all joint ventures on the same basis.
Role: This prevents cherry-picking.
Practical importance: It improves comparability and reduces earnings management risk.
5.5 Dividends
When the right to receive a dividend is established, the investor recognizes the dividend in its separate financial statements according to the applicable rules.
Role: Dividends are a major way parent-only profits arise under the cost model.
Practical importance: Parent-company profit may be driven more by upstream dividends than by underlying group operations.
Caution: Under the equity method, dividends usually reduce the carrying amount of the investment rather than creating separate dividend income in the same way as under the cost model.
5.6 Interaction with impairment and disposal rules
IAS 27 does not work alone.
- IAS 36 may apply for impairment when investments are measured at cost or under equity method.
- IFRS 5 may apply when relevant investments are classified as held for sale.
- IFRS 9 applies if the investment is measured under financial instrument rules.
Practical importance: Measurement after acquisition is often where mistakes happen.
5.7 Disclosure requirements
IAS 27 requires disclosures about:
- the nature of the statements as separate financial statements
- significant investments
- accounting methods used
- exemptions or special presentation circumstances, where relevant
Practical importance: Readers need to know what they are looking at. A parent-only statement can be badly misunderstood if the basis is unclear.
6. Related Terms and Distinctions
| Related Term | Relationship to Main Term | Key Difference | Common Confusion |
|---|---|---|---|
| IFRS 10 | Closely related | IFRS 10 deals mainly with consolidation and control; IAS 27 deals with separate financial statements | People often think IAS 27 is still the main consolidation standard |
| IAS 28 | Closely related | IAS 28 governs the equity method for associates and joint ventures | Some think IAS 28 is irrelevant once IAS 27 is used; it is not |
| IFRS 9 | Measurement alternative under IAS 27 | IFRS 9 provides financial instrument measurement rules, including fair value approaches | Some assume separate FS always use cost |
| IFRS 12 | Disclosure companion | IFRS 12 adds disclosures about interests in other entities | Some readers expect IAS 27 alone to contain all disclosures |
| IFRS 5 | Special case standard | IFRS 5 affects qualifying investments classified as held for sale | Often forgotten in separate FS |
| IAS 36 | Impairment standard | IAS 36 may be needed when cost/equity method investments show impairment indicators | Users sometimes skip impairment because the investment is “just one line” |
| Consolidated financial statements | Opposite reporting view | Consolidated statements show the group as one economic entity | Separate FS are often wrongly treated as a substitute for consolidation |
| Standalone financial statements | Informal or local term | Often used to mean legal-entity accounts; under IFRS the technical term is “separate financial statements” | “Standalone” can mean different things across jurisdictions |
| Subsidiary | Investee category | A subsidiary is controlled; this affects classification | Some people label all investees as subsidiaries |
| Associate | Investee category | Associate means significant influence, not control | Frequently confused with joint venture |
| Joint venture | Investee category | Joint control and rights to net assets | Sometimes confused with jointly controlled operations |
| Ind AS 27 | Jurisdictional equivalent in India | Similar concept under Indian standards, but local law and implementation details matter | IAS 27 and Ind AS 27 are often treated as automatically identical |
| US GAAP parent-only reporting | Comparable area, different framework | US GAAP uses different codification and concepts | IAS 27 does not apply in US GAAP reporting |
7. Where It Is Used
Accounting
This is the main context. IAS 27 is directly used in preparing separate financial statements under IFRS or IFRS-based frameworks.
Finance and treasury
It matters when:
- assessing dividend capacity
- reviewing legal-entity net worth
- planning upstream cash flows from subsidiaries
- managing parent-company debt obligations
Business operations
Corporate groups often use IAS 27-based separate numbers for:
- board reporting
- entity-level performance review
- restructuring decisions
- holding-company cash planning
Banking and lending
Lenders may look at parent-only financial statements to evaluate:
- covenant compliance
- holding-company liquidity
- debt service capacity
- legal-entity solvency
Valuation and investing
Investors and analysts use it to:
- compare parent-only and consolidated profits
- understand holdco discounts
- assess dividend dependence
- evaluate the quality of earnings
Reporting and disclosures
IAS 27 appears in:
- annual reports
- statutory filings
- exchange filings where required
- audited parent-company financial statements
Policy and regulation
It is relevant wherever IFRS or IFRS-based reporting is mandated or permitted, often with overlays from:
- company law
- securities regulation
- prudential regulation
- tax law
Analytics and research
Researchers and analysts use separate financial statements to study:
- capital allocation
- intra-group dependence
- legal-entity leverage
- dividend extraction risk
Economics
IAS 27 is not primarily an economics term. Its relevance to economics is indirect, mainly through corporate reporting quality and institutional analysis.
8. Use Cases
8.1 Statutory parent-company reporting
- Who is using it: Parent company finance team
- Objective: Prepare legal-entity financial statements
- How the term is applied: Investments in subsidiaries, associates, and joint ventures are measured under IAS 27 rules rather than consolidated
- Expected outcome: A compliant set of parent-only accounts
- Risks / limitations: Readers may misread parent-only profit as group profit
8.2 Dividend declaration support
- Who is using it: Board, CFO, company secretary
- Objective: Evaluate whether the parent has distributable profits or reserves under applicable law
- How the term is applied: Separate financial statements show parent-level income, often including dividends from subsidiaries
- Expected outcome: Better legal and governance support for distribution decisions
- Risks / limitations: Local dividend law may differ from accounting profit; always verify legal rules
8.3 Holdco borrowing and covenant analysis
- Who is using it: Lenders, treasury teams, rating analysts
- Objective: Assess whether the parent entity can service debt
- How the term is applied: IAS 27 separate numbers show whether the parent has cash inflows from dividends or other sources
- Expected outcome: More realistic view of parent-only debt service
- Risks / limitations: Strong consolidated results do not guarantee strong parent-only liquidity
8.4 Performance tracking for associates and joint ventures
- Who is using it: Group accountants, analysts
- Objective: Reflect investment performance in a meaningful way
- How the term is applied: Entity may use the equity method in separate financial statements for associates or joint ventures
- Expected outcome: Separate accounts that better reflect ongoing investee performance
- Risks / limitations: Equity method can still hide underlying balance sheet detail
8.5 Fair value reporting by investment-style entities
- Who is using it: Investment holding entities, some financial groups
- Objective: Show investments at current value
- How the term is applied: IAS 27 allows use of IFRS 9 for relevant categories
- Expected outcome: More market-sensitive measurement
- Risks / limitations: Fair value can increase volatility and require judgment
8.6 Disposal planning
- Who is using it: M&A teams, CFO, auditors
- Objective: Prepare for sale or restructuring of a subsidiary or other investee
- How the term is applied: Investments measured at cost or under the equity method may move into IFRS 5 treatment if classified as held for sale
- Expected outcome: Correct accounting before disposal
- Risks / limitations: Misclassification can distort carrying amounts and disclosures
9. Real-World Scenarios
A. Beginner scenario
- Background: A student reads a parent company balance sheet and sees only “Investment in Subsidiary” instead of the subsidiary’s inventory, receivables, and debt.
- Problem: The student thinks the company has “left out” the subsidiary’s assets and liabilities.
- Application of the term: IAS 27 explains that in separate financial statements, the parent reports the investment as a single line item rather than consolidating line by line.
- Decision taken: The student compares the separate statements with the consolidated statements.
- Result: The student realizes both views are valid but serve different purposes.
- Lesson learned: Separate financial statements show the legal entity; consolidated financial statements show the economic group.
B. Business scenario
- Background: A manufacturing holding company wants to declare a dividend to its own shareholders.
- Problem: The group is profitable on a consolidated basis, but the parent company itself has limited income unless subsidiaries upstream dividends.
- Application of the term: Under IAS 27, the parent’s separate financial statements recognize dividend income from subsidiaries when the right to receive it is established.
- Decision taken: Management reviews parent-only reserves and planned subsidiary distributions before recommending a dividend.
- Result: The board avoids making a distribution decision based only on consolidated profit.
- Lesson learned: Consolidated profitability and legal-entity distributable capacity are not the same thing.
C. Investor / market scenario
- Background: An investor analyzes a listed holding company and notices that parent-only profit is much higher than consolidated profit for the year.
- Problem: The investor is unsure whether this means performance improved.
- Application of the term: IAS 27 may allow the parent to recognize large dividend income from subsidiaries in separate financial statements, while the consolidated group may be facing pressure.
- Decision taken: The investor checks whether parent profit is dividend-driven, whether dividends are sustainable, and whether any investments are impaired.
- Result: The investor gets a better understanding of earnings quality.
- Lesson learned: Separate profits can be accounting-rich but cash- and sustainability-sensitive.
D. Policy / government / regulatory scenario
- Background: A regulator requires legal-entity filings in addition to group accounts for transparency and creditor protection.
- Problem: Users need a consistent basis to compare investment holdings across entities.
- Application of the term: IAS 27 provides the framework for how investments in subsidiaries, associates, and joint ventures are reported in those separate financial statements.
- Decision taken: Entities prepare separate statements with clear disclosures about accounting methods and significant investees.
- Result: Stakeholders can assess both group-level and legal-entity-level financial strength.
- Lesson learned: Separate financial statements serve a governance and market-discipline purpose, not just an accounting one.
E. Advanced professional scenario
- Background: A multinational parent has subsidiaries, an associate, and a joint venture. It must prepare separate financial statements for lender covenants and statutory filing.
- Problem: Management wants relevant information while avoiding inconsistency.
- Application of the term: Under IAS 27, the entity chooses cost for subsidiaries, equity method for associates, and IFRS 9 for joint ventures, applying the same basis within each category and assessing impairment or held-for-sale treatment where needed.
- Decision taken: The accounting policy is documented, disclosures are expanded, and analysts are given a reconciliation to consolidated numbers.
- Result: Reporting becomes more understandable and audit issues are reduced.
- Lesson learned: IAS 27 is not just a measurement rule; it is also a communication and governance tool.
10. Worked Examples
10.1 Simple conceptual example
Situation:
Parent Co owns 100% of Sub Co.
In consolidated financial statements: – Parent Co and Sub Co are shown as one group. – Sub Co’s assets, liabilities, income, and expenses are combined line by line.
In separate financial statements under IAS 27: – Parent Co usually shows one line such as: – Investment in Sub Co
Key point:
Consolidation shows the group. IAS 27 separate financial statements show the investor entity itself.
10.2 Practical business example
Facts: – Parent Co acquires Subsidiary A for 1,000,000. – Parent Co uses the cost model for subsidiaries in its separate financial statements. – During the year, Subsidiary A declares a dividend of 80,000 to Parent Co.
Accounting effect in Parent Co’s separate financial statements:
-
On acquisition: – Investment in Subsidiary A = 1,000,000
-
When dividend right is established: – Dividend income = 80,000
-
Carrying amount of the investment: – Remains at 1,000,000 unless impaired or otherwise adjusted under applicable standards
Simplified journal entries:
- On acquisition
- Dr Investment in Subsidiary 1,000,000
-
Cr Cash 1,000,000
-
On dividend recognition
- Dr Cash / Dividend receivable 80,000
- Cr Dividend income 80,000
Lesson:
Under the cost model, parent-company profit can rise because of dividends even if the carrying amount of the investment does not change.
10.3 Numerical example
Facts: – Subsidiaries are measured at cost – Associates are measured using the equity method – Joint ventures are measured under IFRS 9 at fair value
At the start of the year, Parent Co has:
- Investment in Subsidiary S: 1,000,000
- Investment in Associate A: 400,000
- Investment in Joint Venture J: 320,000
During the year:
- Subsidiary S declares dividend: 80,000
- Associate A reports profit attributable to Parent Co: 60,000
- Associate A pays dividend: 20,000
- Joint Venture J year-end fair value: 350,000
- Joint Venture J pays dividend: 10,000
Step 1: Subsidiary under cost model
- Opening carrying amount = 1,000,000
- Dividend income recognized = 80,000
- Closing carrying amount = 1,000,000
Step 2: Associate under equity method
Formula:
Closing carrying amount = Opening carrying amount + Share of profit – Dividends received
So:
- Opening carrying amount = 400,000
- Plus share of profit = 60,000
- Less dividend received = 20,000
- Closing carrying amount = 440,000
Profit or loss impact: – Share of profit = 60,000
Dividend under equity method: – Reduces investment carrying amount
Step 3: Joint venture under IFRS 9 fair value basis
- Opening carrying amount = 320,000
- Year-end fair value = 350,000
- Fair value gain = 30,000
If the dividend is ordinary dividend income under the applicable IFRS 9 treatment: – Dividend income = 10,000
Step 4: Summary table
| Investment | Basis | Opening Amount | Income / Gain Effect | Closing Amount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subsidiary S | Cost | 1,000,000 | Dividend income 80,000 | 1,000,000 |
| Associate A | Equity method | 400,000 | Share of profit 60,000 | 440,000 |
| Joint Venture J | IFRS 9 fair value | 320,000 | Fair value gain 30,000; dividend 10,000 | 350,000 |
Step 5: Total profit effect from these items
- Dividend income from subsidiary = 80,000
- Share of profit from associate = 60,000
- Fair value gain on JV = 30,000
- Dividend income from JV = 10,000
Total impact on profit = 180,000
Lesson:
The accounting basis chosen under IAS 27 can materially affect both profit and closing carrying amounts.
10.4 Advanced example: held-for-sale situation
Facts: – Parent