Objective
IAS 40 prescribes the accounting treatment and disclosure for investment property — property held to earn rentals or for capital appreciation (or both) rather than:
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Use in production or supply of goods or services or for administrative purposes (IAS 16 – PPE), or
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Sale in the ordinary course of business (IAS 2 – Inventories).
🧱 1. Definition
Investment property is:
Land or building (or part of a building, or both) held (by the owner or lessee under a finance lease) to earn rentals or for capital appreciation, or both.
🏠 2. Examples of Investment Property
✅ Land held for long-term capital appreciation (not for owner-occupation).
✅ Land held for an undetermined future use.
✅ Building leased out to tenants under operating leases.
✅ Vacant building held to be leased out in the future.
❌ Not Investment Property (Examples):
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Owner-occupied property → IAS 16
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Property held for sale in the ordinary course of business → IAS 2
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Property being constructed for third parties → IFRS 15
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Property leased to another entity under a finance lease → derecognized by lessor
📋 3. Recognition
An investment property shall be recognized as an asset when both conditions are met:
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It is probable that future economic benefits will flow to the entity; and
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The cost of the property can be measured reliably.
💰 4. Measurement
Initial Measurement
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At cost, including:
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Purchase price
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Transaction costs (legal fees, duties, taxes, etc.)
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Example:
A company buys a building for $1,000,000 and pays legal fees of $20,000.
👉 Initial cost = $1,020,000.
Subsequent Measurement: Two Models
Entity chooses an accounting policy:
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Fair Value Model
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Cost Model
1️⃣ Fair Value Model
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Property is measured at fair value at each reporting date.
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Gains or losses from changes in fair value → recognized in profit or loss.
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No depreciation.
Example:
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Fair value at year-end = $1,200,000
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Carrying amount = $1,020,000
→ Gain = $180,000 (recognized in P&L).
2️⃣ Cost Model
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Property is carried at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment losses, following IAS 16.
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Fair value must still be disclosed in the notes.
Example:
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Cost = $1,020,000
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Depreciation for the year = $20,400
→ Carrying amount = $999,600 (shown in balance sheet). -
Fair value (for note disclosure) = $1,200,000.
🔄 5. Transfers
Transfers to or from investment property only when there is a change in use:
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Owner-occupied → Investment property (start using as rental)
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Inventory → Investment property (now held to earn rentals)
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Investment property → PPE (now owner-occupied)
Measurement at the date of transfer:
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At fair value (if moving to/from fair value model)
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Use cost model if chosen.
🏗️ 6. Investment Property under Construction
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Previously, such property was accounted for under IAS 16 until completion.
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Now (since IAS 40 was amended), fair value model applies during construction if fair value can be measured reliably.
📖 7. Disclosure Requirements
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Accounting policy used (fair value or cost)
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If fair value model: disclose changes in fair value recognized in profit or loss.
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If cost model: disclose depreciation, carrying amount, and fair value.
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Rental income and direct operating expenses from investment property.
🧩 8. Simple Practical Example
Scenario:
ABC Ltd owns:
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Building A rented to tenants → Investment property
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Building B used as office → Owner-occupied (IAS 16)
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Building C held for sale → Inventory (IAS 2)
Accounting:
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Building A measured at fair value $3,000,000 → gain of $200,000 recognized in P&L.
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Building B depreciated under IAS 16.
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Building C measured at lower of cost and NRV under IAS 2.
📘 Summary Table
| Type of Property | Standard | Measurement |
|---|---|---|
| Held for rentals/capital gain | IAS 40 | Fair value or cost model |
| Used in operations | IAS 16 | Cost less depreciation |
| Held for sale | IAS 2 | Lower of cost and NRV |
| Leased to others under finance lease | IFRS 16 | Derecognize asset |