Qualitative characteristics of financial statements

The qualitative characteristics of financial statements include understandability, relevance, reliability, and comparability. We expand on these concepts below.

Understandability

The information must be readily understandable to users of the financial statements. This means that information must be clearly presented, with additional information supplied in the supporting footnotes as needed to assist in clarification. This means that you must avoid all obfuscation, where readers are buried in meaningless details.

Relevance

The information must be relevant to the needs of the users, which is the case when the information influences their economic decisions. This may involve reporting particularly relevant information, or information whose omission or misstatement could influence the economic decisions of users.

Reliability

The information must be free of material error and bias, and not misleading. Thus, the information should faithfully represent transactions and other events, reflect the underlying substance of events, and prudently represent estimates and uncertainties through proper disclosure.

Comparability

The information must be comparable to the financial information presented for other accounting periods, so that users can identify trends in the performance and financial position of the reporting entity.

Related AccountingTools Courses

The Balance Sheet

The Income Statement

The Statement of Cash Flows