Prior period adjustment definition

What is a Prior Period Adjustment?

A prior period adjustment is a transaction used to modify an issue that arose in a prior reporting period. There are actually two types of prior period adjustments. The first is a correction of an error in the financial statements that was reported for a prior period. The second type of prior period adjustment was caused by the realization of the income tax benefits arising from the operating losses of purchased subsidiaries before they were acquired. Since the second situation is both highly specific and rare, a prior period adjustment really applies to just the first item - the correction of an error in the financial statements of a prior period. An error in a financial statement may be caused by mathematical mistakes, mistakes in the application of GAAP or some other accounting framework, or the oversight or misuse of facts that existed at the time the financial statements were prepared.

How to Account for a Prior Period Adjustment

You should account for a prior period adjustment by restating the prior period financial statements. This is done by adjusting the carrying amounts of any impacted assets or liabilities as of the first accounting period presented, with an offset to the beginning retained earnings balance in that same accounting period.

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Accounting Changes and Error Corrections

Presentation of a Prior Period Adjustment

If you are presenting the results of a prior period alongside the results of the most recent accounting period, and the prior period adjustment impacts the prior period being presented, you must present the results of the prior period as though the error had never occurred. If you are making a prior period adjustment to an interim period of the current accounting year, restate the interim period to reflect the impact of the adjustment. Finally, when you record a prior period adjustment, disclose the effect of the correction on each financial statement line item and any affected per-share amounts, as well as the cumulative effect on the change in retained earnings.

Immaterial Prior Period Adjustments

Investors and creditors tend to view prior period adjustments with deep suspicion, assuming that there was a failure in a company's system of accounting that caused the problem. Consequently, it is best to avoid these adjustments when the amount of the prospective change is immaterial to the results and financial position shown in the company's financial statements.

Example of a Prior Period Adjustment

The controller of ABC International makes a mistake when calculating depreciation in the preceding year, resulting in depreciation that is $1,000 too low. He finds the error in the following year, and corrects the error with this entry to the beginning balance of retained earnings:

  Debit Credit

Retained earnings

1,000  

     Accumulated depreciation

  1,000


These changes result in the disclosure of the following alteration of ABC's beginning retained earnings balance:

Retained earnings, January 1, 20X1 150,000
Prior period adjustment:  
     Correction of depreciation error (1,000)
Adjusted retained earnings, January 1, 20X1 149,000