
Price Bailey announces new membership with HARPA
Price Bailey announces its new membership with HARPA, the Holiday and Residential Parks Association, in a move that marks the firm’s continued commitment to supporting...
Glossary
Goodwill is the future economic benefits arising from assets that are not capable of being individually identified and separately recognised. It typically arises on the acquisition of a business where the purchase price exceeds the fair value of identifiable net assets.
Goodwill arises in a business combination when one entity acquires another and pays consideration greater than the fair value of the identifiable assets and liabilities acquired. The excess reflects factors such as reputation, customer relationships, brand strength, workforce expertise and expected synergies that cannot be separately recognised as individual intangible assets.
In UK financial reporting, goodwill is recognised as an intangible asset under frameworks such as FRS 102 or IFRS as adopted in the UK. Under FRS 102, goodwill is amortised over its useful economic life, with a rebuttable presumption that this does not exceed five years if it cannot be reliably estimated. Under IFRS, goodwill is not amortised but is subject to annual impairment testing.
Goodwill does not arise from internal business growth. Internally generated goodwill is not recognised in statutory accounts.
Key characteristics of goodwill include the following:
Goodwill works through the following conceptual stages:
A UK company acquires another business for £2 million. The fair value of identifiable assets is £1.5 million and liabilities are £0.3 million, giving net identifiable assets of £1.2 million. The £0.8 million excess of consideration over net assets is recognised as goodwill in the acquirer’s statutory accounts.
Internally generated goodwill cannot be recognised as an asset in statutory accounts. Accounting standards prohibit recognition because it cannot be reliably measured or separately identified from the business as a whole.
Under UK GAAP, including FRS 102, goodwill is amortised over its useful economic life and tested for impairment where indicators exist. Under IFRS as adopted in the UK, goodwill is not amortised but is subject to annual impairment testing.
Goodwill is allocated to cash-generating units or groups of assets and compared against their recoverable amount. If the carrying amount exceeds the recoverable amount, an impairment loss is recognised in the income statement.
Goodwill is amortised under UK GAAP over its useful economic life. Under IFRS as adopted in the UK, goodwill is not amortised but is reviewed annually for impairment.
It is recognised as an intangible asset and subsequently amortised or tested for impairment depending on the applicable reporting framework.
We always recommend that you seek advice from a suitably qualified adviser before taking any action. The information in this glossary entry only serves as a guide and no responsibility for loss occasioned by any person acting or refraining from action as a result of this material can be accepted by the authors or the firm.
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