The IFRS for SMEs Accounting Standard Update is a staff summary of news, events and other information about the IFRS for SMEs® Accounting Standard (Standard) and related SME activities. The staff summary has not been reviewed by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).
This edition of the IFRS for SMEs Accounting Standard Update includes:
Section 9 Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements in the third edition of the IFRS for SMEs Accounting Standard sets out requirements for an entity to prepare consolidated financial statements and how the entity prepares those statements. Section 9 also includes guidance on separate and combined financial statements.
In the second edition of the Standard, Section 9 was based on IAS 27 Separate Financial Statements and included guidance for special purpose entities based on SIC-12 Consolidation—Special Purpose Entities.1 In the third edition of the Standard, Section 9 is based on IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements. IFRS 10 introduced a single control model for determining whether an entity controls another entity, providing users with more comparable, consistent and useful financial information.
The updated Section 9 introduces:
| Element | All conditions that need to be satisfied for an investor to control an investee |
|---|---|
| Power | An investor’s power over an investee when the investor has existing rights that give it the current ability to direct the investee’s relevant activities (the activities that significantly affect the investee’s returns). |
| Returns | An investor’s exposure or rights to variable returns from its involvement with the investee. |
| Link between power and returns | An investor’s ability to use its power over the investee to affect the investor’s returns. |
To simplify the application of the control model, the IASB retained the rebuttable presumption in paragraph 9.5 of the Standard.
Control is presumed to exist when the investor owns, directly or indirectly through subsidiaries, a majority of the voting rights of an investee. This presumption can be rebutted if it can be clearly demonstrated that one or more elements of control are absent. Figure 1 presents a decision tree for determining whether an investor has control of an investee.
The amendments to Section 9 are applied retrospectively, as though the revised requirements were always in effect. These reliefs are provided to ease transition:
The IASB also updated the educational module, Module 9 Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements. The module includes explanations, examples and assessments (including case studies) supporting application of the requirements in Section 9.
The SME Implementation Group (SMEIG) is a consultative group for the IASB. It was established to support the global adoption of the Standard and to monitor its application.
SMEIG met on 5 February 2026. The purpose of the meeting was:
The application question was about whether the exemption in paragraph 9.3 of the Standard from preparing consolidated financial statements (the ‘consolidation exemption’) applies to an intermediate parent if its ultimate (or intermediate) parent is an investment entity that produces separate financial statements in which the subsidiary is measured at fair value through profit or loss (instead of consolidated financial statements).
The issue arises because IFRS 10 exempts such parent entities from preparing consolidated financial statements if their ultimate parents (or any intermediate parents) prepare financial statements in which their subsidiaries are measured at fair value through profit or loss. Because no equivalent exemption exists in paragraph 9.3 of the IFRS for SMEs Accounting Standard, the Standard’s requirements for such entities are more onerous than those in full IFRS Accounting Standards.
Most SMEIG members agreed that the response to the issue should be to amend the Standard. Most of the SMEIG members who agreed that there should be a response to the issue recommended that the IASB respond urgently, instead of during its next periodic review of the Standard.
The meeting agenda, papers and the meeting recording are available on the February 2026 SME Implementation Group meeting page.
Following the meeting, SMEIG members will vote on whether and how the issue should be addressed. The IASB will consider the results of the vote.
To support implementation of the third edition of the Standard, the IASB has published these supporting materials since the last edition of the IFRS for SMEs Accounting Standard Update:
To support implementation of the third edition of the Standard, the IASB has published these supporting materials:
1 When the second edition of the IFRS for SMEs Accounting Standard was developed, the requirements for both consolidated and separate financial statements were in IAS 27 Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements. After IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements was issued in 2011, the consolidation requirements were moved to IFRS 10, and IAS 27 was amended and became IAS 27 Separate Financial Statements. Section 9 of the second edition therefore reflects the version of IAS 27 that preceded IFRS 10.