Current Provisions
Short-Term Estimated Liabilities for Probable Future Obligations
Current Provisions are liabilities recognized for present obligations (legal or constructive) arising from past events where settlement is expected within 12 months or the operating cycle. The amount or timing is uncertain, but an outflow of resources is probable and reliably estimable. They represent the short-term portion of provisions under standards like IAS 37 (IFRS) and ASC 450 (US GAAP).
Definition and Core Concept
Current Provisions are recognized when a company has a present obligation from a past event, it is probable (>50% under IFRS) that an outflow will be required, and the amount can be reliably estimated.
The 'current' classification applies when settlement is expected within one year or the operating cycle.
Provisions differ from accruals (more certain) and contingent liabilities (not recognized, only disclosed).
Common Types of Current Provisions
- Product warranties and returns expected within a year
- Short-term restructuring costs (severance, contract termination)
- Onerous contracts (unavoidable short-term losses)
- Legal claims and litigation settlements due soon
- Environmental or cleanup costs with near-term obligations
- Customer refunds or loyalty program redemptions
- Short-term decommissioning or restoration
Retailers often provision for returns; manufacturers for warranties.
Recognition and Measurement
Provisions are measured at the best estimate:
- Most likely amount for single obligations
- Expected value (probability-weighted) for large populations
- No discounting for short-term (time value immaterial)
- Reassessed each period — changes to P&L
Utilization reduces provision; unused amounts reversed to income.
Balance Sheet Presentation
Shown under current liabilities as:
- 'Current Provisions'
- 'Short-Term Provisions'
- Sometimes detailed (e.g., 'Provision for Warranties - Current')
- Aggregated in 'Other Current Liabilities' with note breakdown
Notes include movement table: opening, additions, utilizations, reversals, closing.
Distinction from Other Liabilities
Current Provisions
- Uncertainty in amount/timing
- Estimated obligation
Accrued Expenses
- More certain amount (e.g., known bonus)
- Incurred but unpaid
Accounts Payable
- Invoice-based trade credit
Analytical Implications
Current provisions impact:
- Near-term cash outflows (liquidity)
- Earnings quality (subjective estimates)
- Operational risks (warranties, litigation)
- Working capital (non-cash expense)
- Reversals can boost future profits
Large additions may hide underlying issues; frequent reversals suggest aggressive provisioning.
Key Takeaways
Current Provisions are short-term estimated liabilities for probable obligations.
Recognized when present obligation, probable outflow, reliable estimate (IAS 37/ASC 450).
Common for warranties, returns, restructuring, legal claims.
Measured at best estimate; no discounting short-term.
Reflect prudence but can be subjective—monitor movements.
Signal near-term cash risks and operational challenges.
Current Provisions
Short-Term Estimated Liabilities for Probable Future Obligations
Current Provisions are liabilities recognized for present obligations (legal or constructive) arising from past events where settlement is expected within 12 months or the operating cycle. The amount or timing is uncertain, but an outflow of resources is probable and reliably estimable. They represent the short-term portion of provisions under standards like IAS 37 (IFRS) and ASC 450 (US GAAP).
Table of Contents
Definition and Core Concept
Current Provisions are recognized when a company has a present obligation from a past event, it is probable (>50% under IFRS) that an outflow will be required, and the amount can be reliably estimated.
The 'current' classification applies when settlement is expected within one year or the operating cycle.
Provisions differ from accruals (more certain) and contingent liabilities (not recognized, only disclosed).
Common Types of Current Provisions
- Product warranties and returns expected within a year
- Short-term restructuring costs (severance, contract termination)
- Onerous contracts (unavoidable short-term losses)
- Legal claims and litigation settlements due soon
- Environmental or cleanup costs with near-term obligations
- Customer refunds or loyalty program redemptions
- Short-term decommissioning or restoration
Retailers often provision for returns; manufacturers for warranties.
Recognition and Measurement
Provisions are measured at the best estimate:
- Most likely amount for single obligations
- Expected value (probability-weighted) for large populations
- No discounting for short-term (time value immaterial)
- Reassessed each period — changes to P&L
Utilization reduces provision; unused amounts reversed to income.
Balance Sheet Presentation
Shown under current liabilities as:
- 'Current Provisions'
- 'Short-Term Provisions'
- Sometimes detailed (e.g., 'Provision for Warranties - Current')
- Aggregated in 'Other Current Liabilities' with note breakdown
Notes include movement table: opening, additions, utilizations, reversals, closing.
Distinction from Other Liabilities
Current Provisions
- Uncertainty in amount/timing
- Estimated obligation
Accrued Expenses
- More certain amount (e.g., known bonus)
- Incurred but unpaid
Accounts Payable
- Invoice-based trade credit
Analytical Implications
Current provisions impact:
- Near-term cash outflows (liquidity)
- Earnings quality (subjective estimates)
- Operational risks (warranties, litigation)
- Working capital (non-cash expense)
- Reversals can boost future profits
Large additions may hide underlying issues; frequent reversals suggest aggressive provisioning.
Key Takeaways
Current Provisions are short-term estimated liabilities for probable obligations.
Recognized when present obligation, probable outflow, reliable estimate (IAS 37/ASC 450).
Common for warranties, returns, restructuring, legal claims.
Measured at best estimate; no discounting short-term.
Reflect prudence but can be subjective—monitor movements.
Signal near-term cash risks and operational challenges.
Related Terms
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