Here is a clean, exam-ready and practical summary of IFRS 17 – Insurance Contracts, with simple examples to make each section easy to understand.
⭐ IFRS 17 – Insurance Contracts (Summary + Practical Examples)
IFRS 17 replaces IFRS 4 and provides a consistent method for recognizing, measuring, presenting and disclosing insurance contracts.
It applies to:
-
Insurance contracts issued
-
Reinsurance contracts held
-
Investment contracts with discretionary participation features
1. Key Components of IFRS 17
IFRS 17 measurement is based on three building blocks:
A. Fulfilment Cash Flows (FCF)
These are expected future cash flows, discounted and adjusted for risk.
Components:
-
Expected future cash inflows (premiums)
-
Expected future cash outflows (claims, expenses)
-
Discounting (time value of money)
-
Risk Adjustment – compensation for uncertainty
B. Contractual Service Margin (CSM)
CSM = Unearned profit that the insurer recognizes over the coverage period.
-
If CSM becomes negative, the contract is onerous, and loss is recognized immediately.
C. Measurement Models
IFRS 17 provides three models:
1. General Measurement Model (Building Block Approach – BBA)
Default model for long-term insurance.
2. Premium Allocation Approach (PAA)
Simplified model for short-term contracts (usually ≤ 1 year) such as:
-
Motor insurance
-
Travel insurance
3. Variable Fee Approach (VFA)
Used for participating contracts where policyholders share returns on underlying items.
2. Recognition of Revenue
Insurance revenue is recognized based on:
-
Services provided during the period
-
Release of risk adjustment
-
Release of CSM
3. Presentation
Profit or loss includes:
-
Insurance revenue
-
Insurance service expense
-
Insurance finance income/expense (interest unwinding & changes in discount rates)
⭐ 4. Practical Examples
Example 1: General Model (BBA) – CSM Calculation
An insurer issues a 5-year life insurance contract.
Expected future cash inflows (premiums):
= $12,000
Expected future cash outflows (claims + expenses):
= $9,000
Risk adjustment = $300
Discount effect = $200
Fulfilment Cash Flows (FCF)
= (Inflows – Outflows – Risk Adjustment – Discounting)
= 12,000 – 9,000 – 300 – 200
= 2,500
Since this is profit, create CSM:
CSM at initial recognition = $2,500
Revenue will be recognized per year as CSM is released.
Example 2: Onerous Contract (Loss at Initial Recognition)
Insurer issues an insurance policy with:
-
Expected premiums: $5,000
-
Expected claims & expenses: $6,000
-
Risk adjustment: $200
-
Discount effect: $0
FCF = 5,000 – 6,000 – 200 = –1,200
Since negative → onerous contract.
Accounting:
-
Recognize loss of $1,200 immediately.
-
No CSM because profit = negative.
Example 3: Premium Allocation Approach (PAA)
A 1-year motor insurance contract:
-
Premium received: $1,000
-
Acquisition costs: $100 paid upfront
-
Expected claims: $600
PAA allows treating the premium like unearned premium reserve.
At initial recognition:
-
Liability for remaining coverage (LRC) = Premium – acquisition cash flows
= 1,000 – 100
= 900
During the policy:
-
Each month revenue = 900 / 12
= $75
Claims are expensed when incurred.
Example 4: Revenue Recognition Under IFRS 17
Assume:
-
Annual premiums = $1,200
-
Expected claims = $700
-
Risk adjustment released this year = $100
-
CSM released this year = $150
Insurance revenue for the year:
= Premiums 1,200 – Claims (service component only) + CSM release + Risk adjustment release
Revenue = $1,450
Example 5: Variable Fee Approach (Participating Contract)
Insurance contract linked to a pool of assets.
-
Premium received: $10,000
-
Policyholder shares 90% of investment returns
-
Insurer keeps 10% (variable fee)
If underlying assets earn 8%:
-
Total return = 10,000 × 8% = 800
-
Policyholder share = 720
-
Insurer’s variable fee = 80
This fee adjusts the CSM of the contract.
⭐ Summary Table (Very Clean)
| Component | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Fulfilment Cash Flows | Expected cash in/out + discount + risk adjustment |
| CSM | Unearned profit released over life of contract |
| Onerous Contract | Loss recognized immediately when FCF negative |
| BBA (General Model) | Default method for long-term contracts |
| PAA | Simplified method for ≤12-month contracts |
| VFA | For participating contracts with investment components |