Unpacking ASU 2023-09 income tax disclosure requirements
The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) recently issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) 2023-09, which introduces new disclosure requirements for income taxes in financial statements. This update aims to enhance transparency and provide stakeholders with more comprehensive information regarding a company’s income tax position.
For public business entities (this designation is beyond the scope of this article), the requirements are effective for annual periods beginning after Dec. 15, 2024, while nonpublic business entities have an additional year, with the requirements kicking in for annual periods beginning after Dec. 15, 2025.
One of the key enhancements introduced by ASU 2023-09 is clarification of the disclosures to the income tax rate reconciliation. The ASU establishes categories that public companies must always separately disclose within their rate reconciliation regardless of dollar amount, such as state and local income taxes, foreign tax effects, enacted tax law changes, tax credits, valuation allowance adjustments, nontaxable or nondeductible items, and changes in uncertain tax positions.
Moreover, if any component within these categories exceeds a 5% threshold based on the statutory tax rate applied to pretax income, it must be separately disclosed.
Another significant change relates to the disclosure of income taxes paid. Businesses must now disaggregate the total amount of income taxes paid – net of refunds – across federal, state, and foreign jurisdictions. If the amount paid to any single jurisdiction exceeds 5% of the total, that jurisdiction must be disclosed separately.
These new disclosure requirements likely will necessitate updates to financial reporting processes and controls to satisfy compliance. While the effective dates might seem distant, fintechs should consider compiling the required data in advance to avoid last-minute scrambles during year-end reporting cycles – particularly for comparative financial statements.