IAS 40 — Investment Property (2024)

History of IAS 40

DateDevelopmentComments
October1984Exposure Draft E26 Accounting for Investments published
March1986IAS 25 Accounting for Investments issuedOperative for financial statements covering periods beginning on or after 1 January 1987
July1999Exposure Draft E64 Investment Property publishedComment deadline 31 October 1999
April2000IAS 40 Investment Property (2000) issued
(Supersedes IAS 25 with respect to investment property)
Operative for annual financial statements covering periods beginning on or after 1 January 2001
May2002Exposure Draft Improvements to International Accounting Standards (2000) publishedComment deadline 16 September 2002
18December2003IAS 40 Investment Property (2003) issuedEffective for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2005
22May2008Amended by Annual Improvements to IFRSs 2007 (include property under construction or development for future use within scope)Effective for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2009
12December2013Amended by Annual Improvements to IFRSs 2011–2013 Cycle (interrelationship between IFRS 3 and IAS 40)Effective for annual periods beginning on or after 1 July 2014
8 December 2016Amended by Transfers of Investment Property (Amendments to IAS 40)Effective for annual periods beginning on or after 1 July 2018

Related Interpretations

  • None

Amendments under consideration by the IASB

  • None

Summary of IAS 40

Definition of investment property

Investment property is property (land or a building or part of a building or both) held (by the owner or by the lessee under a finance lease) to earn rentals or for capital appreciation or both. [IAS 40.5]

Examples of investment property: [IAS 40.8]

  • land held for long-term capital appreciation
  • land held for a currently undetermined future use
  • building leased out under an operating lease
  • vacant building held to be leased out under an operating lease
  • property that is being constructed or developed for future use as investment property

The following are not investment property and, therefore, are outside the scope of IAS 40: [IAS 40.5 and 40.9]

  • property held for use in the production or supply of goods or services or for administrative purposes
  • property held for sale in the ordinary course of business or in the process of construction of development for such sale (IAS 2 Inventories)
  • property being constructed or developed on behalf of third parties (IAS 11 Construction Contracts)
  • owner-occupied property (IAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment), including property held for future use as owner-occupied property, property held for future development and subsequent use as owner-occupied property, property occupied by employees and owner-occupied property awaiting disposal
  • property leased to another entity under a finance lease

In May 2008, as part of its Annual improvements project, the IASB expanded the scope of IAS 40 to include property under construction or development for future use as an investment property. Such property previously fell within the scope of IAS 16.

Other classification issues

Property held under an operating lease. A property interest that is held by a lessee under an operating lease may be classified and accounted for as investment property provided that: [IAS 40.6]

  • the rest of the definition of investment property is met
  • the operating lease is accounted for as if it were a finance lease in accordance with IAS 17 Leases
  • the lessee uses the fair value model set out in this Standard for the asset recognised

An entity may make the foregoing classification on a property-by-property basis.

Partial own use. If the owner uses part of the property for its own use, and part to earn rentals or for capital appreciation, and the portions can be sold or leased out separately, they are accounted for separately. Therefore the part that is rented out is investment property. If the portions cannot be sold or leased out separately, the property is investment property only if the owner-occupied portion is insignificant. [IAS 40.10]

Ancillary services. If the entity provides ancillary services to the occupants of a property held by the entity, the appropriateness of classification as investment property is determined by the significance of the services provided. If those services are a relatively insignificant component of the arrangement as a whole (for instance, the building owner supplies security and maintenance services to the lessees), then the entity may treat the property as investment property. Where the services provided are more significant (such as in the case of an owner-managed hotel), the property should be classified as owner-occupied. [IAS 40.13]

Intracompany rentals. Property rented to a parent, subsidiary, or fellow subsidiary is not investment property in consolidated financial statements that include both the lessor and the lessee, because the property is owner-occupied from the perspective of the group. However, such property could qualify as investment property in the separate financial statements of the lessor, if the definition of investment property is otherwise met. [IAS 40.15]

Recognition

Investment property should be recognised as an asset when it is probable that the future economic benefits that are associated with the property will flow to the entity, and the cost of the property can be reliably measured. [IAS 40.16]

Initial measurement

Investment property is initially measured at cost, including transaction costs. Such cost should not include start-up costs, abnormal waste, or initial operating losses incurred before the investment property achieves the planned level of occupancy. [IAS 40.20 and 40.23]

Measurement subsequent to initial recognition

IAS 40 permits entities to choose between: [IAS 40.30]

  • a fair value model, and
  • a cost model.

One method must be adopted for all of an entity's investment property. Change is permitted only if this results in a more appropriate presentation. IAS 40 notes that this is highly unlikely for a change from a fair value model to a cost model.

Fair value model

Investment property is remeasured at fair value, which is the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. [IAS 40.5] Gains or losses arising from changes in the fair value of investment property must be included in net profit or loss for the period in which it arises. [IAS 40.35]

Fair value should reflect the actual market state and circ*mstances as of the balance sheet date. [IAS 40.38] The best evidence of fair value is normally given by current prices on an active market for similar property in the same location and condition and subject to similar lease and other contracts. [IAS 40.45] In the absence of such information, the entity may consider current prices for properties of a different nature or subject to different conditions, recent prices on less active markets with adjustments to reflect changes in economic conditions, and discounted cash flow projections based on reliable estimates of future cash flows. [IAS 40.46]

There is a rebuttable presumption that the entity will be able to determine the fair value of an investment property reliably on a continuing basis. However: [IAS 40.53]

  • If an entity determines that the fair value of an investment property under construction is not reliably determinable but expects the fair value of the property to be reliably determinable when construction is complete, it measures that investment property under construction at cost until either its fair value becomes reliably determinable or construction is completed.
  • If an entity determines that the fair value of an investment property (other than an investment property under construction) is not reliably determinable on a continuing basis, the entity shall measure that investment property using the cost model in IAS 16. The residual value of the investment property shall be assumed to be zero. The entity shall apply IAS 16 until disposal of the investment property.

Where a property has previously been measured at fair value, it should continue to be measured at fair value until disposal, even if comparable market transactions become less frequent or market prices become less readily available. [IAS 40.55]

Cost model

After initial recognition, investment property is accounted for in accordance with the cost model as set out in IAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment – cost less accumulated depreciation and less accumulated impairment losses. [IAS 40.56]

Transfers to or from investment property classification

Transfers to, or from, investment property should only be made when there is a change in use, evidenced by one or more of the following: [IAS 40.57 (note that this list was changed from an exhaustive list to an non-exhaustive list of examples byTransfers of Investment Property in December 2016 effective 1 January 2018) ]

  • commencement of owner-occupation (transfer from investment property to owner-occupied property)
  • commencement of development with a view to sale (transfer from investment property to inventories)
  • end of owner-occupation (transfer from owner-occupied property to investment property)
  • commencement of an operating lease to another party (transfer from inventories to investment property)
  • end of construction or development (transfer from property in the course of construction/development to investment property

When an entity decides to sell an investment property without development, the property is not reclassified as inventory but is dealt with as investment property until it is derecognised. [IAS 40.58]

The following rules apply for accounting for transfers between categories:

  • for a transfer from investment property carried at fair value to owner-occupied property or inventories, the fair value at the change of use is the 'cost' of the property under its new classification [IAS 40.60]
  • for a transfer from owner-occupied property to investment property carried at fair value, IAS 16 should be applied up to the date of reclassification. Any difference arising between the carrying amount under IAS 16 at that date and the fair value is dealt with as a revaluation under IAS 16 [IAS 40.61]
  • for a transfer from inventories to investment property at fair value, any difference between the fair value at the date of transfer and it previous carrying amount should be recognised in profit or loss [IAS 40.63]
  • when an entity completes construction/development of an investment property that will be carried at fair value, any difference between the fair value at the date of transfer and the previous carrying amount should be recognised in profit or loss. [IAS 40.65]

When an entity uses the cost model for investment property, transfers between categories do not change the carrying amount of the property transferred, and they do not change the cost of the property for measurement or disclosure purposes.

Disposal

An investment property should be derecognised on disposal or when the investment property is permanently withdrawn from use and no future economic benefits are expected from its disposal. The gain or loss on disposal should be calculated as the difference between the net disposal proceeds and the carrying amount of the asset and should be recognised as income or expense in the income statement. [IAS 40.66 and 40.69] Compensation from third parties is recognised when it becomes receivable. [IAS 40.72]

Disclosure

Both Fair Value Model and Cost Model [IAS 40.75]

  • whether the fair value or the cost model is used
  • if the fair value model is used, whether property interests held under operating leases are classified and accounted for as investment property
  • if classification is difficult, the criteria to distinguish investment property from owner-occupied property and from property held for sale
  • the extent to which the fair value of investment property is based on a valuation by a qualified independent valuer; if there has been no such valuation, that fact must be disclosed
  • the amounts recognised in profit or loss for:
    • rental income from investment property
    • direct operating expenses (including repairs and maintenance) arising from investment property that generated rental income during the period
    • direct operating expenses (including repairs and maintenance) arising from investment property that did not generate rental income during the period
    • the cumulative change in fair value recognised in profit or loss on a sale from a pool of assets in which the cost model is used into a pool in which the fair value model is used
  • restrictions on the realisability of investment property or the remittance of income and proceeds of disposal
  • contractual obligations to purchase, construct, or develop investment property or for repairs, maintenance or enhancements

Additional Disclosures for the Fair Value Model [IAS 40.76]

  • a reconciliation between the carrying amounts of investment property at the beginning and end of the period, showing additions, disposals, fair value adjustments, net foreign exchange differences, transfers to and from inventories and owner-occupied property, and other changes [IAS 40.76]
  • significant adjustments to an outside valuation (if any) [IAS 40.77]
  • if an entity that otherwise uses the fair value model measures an item of investment property using the cost model, certain additional disclosures are required [IAS 40.78]

Additional Disclosures for the Cost Model [IAS 40.79]

  • the depreciation methods used
  • the useful lives or the depreciation rates used
  • the gross carrying amount and the accumulated depreciation (aggregated with accumulated impairment losses) at the beginning and end of the period
  • a reconciliation of the carrying amount of investment property at the beginning and end of the period, showing additions, disposals, depreciation, impairment recognised or reversed, foreign exchange differences, transfers to and from inventories and owner-occupied property, and other changes
  • the fair value of investment property. If the fair value of an item of investment property cannot be measured reliably, additional disclosures are required, including, if possible, the range of estimates within which fair value is highly likely to lie
IAS 40 — Investment Property (2024)

FAQs

What are considered investment properties under IAS 40? ›

IAS 401 defines 'investment property' as property (land and/or a building) that is held to earn rental income and/or for capital appreciation. It includes property that is owned or leased (right-of-use asset).

How many models must an entity use for all its investment property? ›

One method must be adopted for all of an entity's investment property. Change is permitted only if this results in a more appropriate presentation. IAS 40 notes that this is highly unlikely for a change from a fair value model to a cost model.

What is a common error when accounting for investment property IAS 40? ›

A common error occurs when preparers fail to change the classification to investment property in the individual financial statements of the property owner, who is merely holding the property to earn rentals.

How often do you need to revalue investment property? ›

Accounting treatment

FRS 102 requires revaluation each year to fair value (equivalent to open market value) of investment properties with value changes taken to profit or loss. The cost less depreciation model is used only if fair value cannot be measured reliably without undue cost or effort.

Which property does not qualify as an investment property? ›

Examples of assets that are not investment property are property intended for sale in the near term, property being constructed for a third party, owner-occupied property, and property leased to a third party under a finance lease.

What constitutes an investment property? ›

An investment property is real estate property purchased with the intention of earning a return on the investment either through rental income, the future resale of the property, or both.

What is the fair value adjustment of investment property? ›

Fair value is the price at which the property could be exchanged between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm's length transaction, without deducting transaction costs (see IFRS 13). Under the cost model, investment property is measured at cost less accumulated depreciation and any accumulated impairment losses.

What is an investment property shall be measured initially at? ›

An owned investment property shall be measured initially at its cost. Transaction costs shall be included in the initial measurement. The cost of a purchased investment property comprises its purchase price and any directly attributable expenditure.

What is the difference between inventory and investment property? ›

Investment property is property that you're holding for appreciation. You're hoping that it goes up in value and that it's a good investment. Inventory, on the other hand, is property that you acquire with the intention of reselling.

What is the 2 percent rule for investment property? ›

The 2% rule is a rule of thumb that determines how much rental income a property should theoretically be able to generate. Following the 2% rule, an investor can expect to realize a positive cash flow from a rental property if the monthly rent is at least 2% of the purchase price.

When should you let go of an investment property? ›

You should consider selling an investment property in a sellers market if the profit you earn outweighs the future property value growth and the passive rental income. If not selling in a sellers market, you should plan to use those profits to invest in a stronger opportunity or diversify your portfolio.

How do you determine the value of an investment property? ›

Also known as GRM, the gross rent multiplier approach is one of the simplest ways to determine the fair market value of a property. To calculate GRM, simply divide the current property market value or purchase price by the gross annual rental income: Gross Rent Multiplier = Property Price or Value / Gross Rental Income.

What assets are classified as investments? ›

Investment assets are tangible or intangible items obtained for producing additional income or held for speculation in anticipation of a future increase in value. Examples of investment assets include mutual funds, stocks, bonds, real estate, and retirement savings accounts such as 401(k)s and IRAs.

What are the four general categories of investment property? ›

Remember, there are a hundred different investment strategies available in real estate investing but only four types of real estate: residential, commercial, industrial and land. So, why are property types so important in real estate investing? The short answer is they each produce returns in different ways.

What are the classification of investment assets? ›

Historically, the three main asset classes have been equities (stocks), fixed income (bonds), and cash equivalent or money market instruments. Currently, most investment professionals include real estate, commodities, futures, other financial derivatives, and even cryptocurrencies in the asset class mix.

What can investment be classified to? ›

A simple way of classifying investments is to divide them into three categories or “investment methods” which include: Debt investments (loans) Equity investments (company ownership) Hybrid investments (convertible securities, mezzanine capital, preferred shares)

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