AASB 10 Consolidated Financial Statements (equivalent to IFRS 10, as adopted by the Australian Accounting Standards Board)

Intercompany Eliminations
Australia

IFRS 10 intercompany elimination tool with Australia-specific regulatory context, Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) for financial reporting enforcement; Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) for prudential regulation; Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (AUASB) for auditing standards expectations, and local consolidation guidance.

IFRS 10 · LIVEv2026.040/8 sections

Consolidation eliminations,
journal-ready.

Session
0x70B5
Group
FY 2026
Ownership
100%
eliminations.conf
ifrs10.ref
README.md
01// group— IFRS 10.B86
02group_name=
03parent_entity=
04subsidiary=
05ownership_pct=%
06reporting_period=
07// section_a.trading— IFRS 10.B86(b)
08enabled=
09// section_b.upii— IFRS 10.B86(c)
10enabled=
11// section_c.ic_loan— IFRS 9 / IAS 24
12enabled=
13// section_d.dividend— IFRS 10.B86(a) · B94
14enabled=
15// section_e.ar_ap_balance— IFRS 10.B86(c)
16enabled=
17// section_f.mgmt_fee— IAS 24.18
18enabled=
19// consolidation_scope— IFRS 10.7 · B18-B85
Control assessment (IFRS 10.7 — all three elements required):
50
51
52
53
54
55
56scope.rationale=
Consolidation scope · control rationale (IFRS 10.7 · B18-B85)
20// journal_entries— IFRS 10.B86 · auto-derived
Enable one or more elimination sections above to generate journal entries.
Journal entries · auto-derived (IFRS 10.B86)
21// transfer_pricing— IAS 24.18 · OECD BEPS Action 13
Transfer pricing documentation (tick each confirmed):
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
68tp.rationale=
Transfer pricing · IAS 24.18 + OECD BEPS Action 13
22// deferred_tax_on_upii— IAS 12.39
70buyer_tax_rate=%
Enable Section B (UPII) to see the deferred-tax asset.
72dta.rationale=
Deferred tax on UPII · IAS 12.39
23// completeness_assessment— IFRS 10.B86
IC elimination category coverage (✓ = addressed via sections A-F above, toggle G/H if applicable):
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84completeness.narrative=
Completeness · IFRS 10.B86 category coverage
24// risk_warnings— ISA 600.A141 · rule engine
Enable sections above to run risk analysis.
Risk warnings · rule engine (ISA 600.A141)
25// disclosure_and_conclusion— IFRS 12.9-13 · IAS 24.18
Tick disclosure items addressed in FS notes:
90IFRS 12.10
91IFRS 12.12
92IFRS 12.B10-11
93IFRS 12.13
94IAS 24.18(a)-(b)
95IAS 24.18(b)
96IAS 24.17
97IFRS 10.B86
98prepared_by=
99reviewed_by=
**conclusion.narrative=
Disclosure + conclusion · IFRS 12.9-13 + IAS 24.18
awaiting input·0 JEs · 0/8 sectionsEUR·100%
previewwp-ic-elim-2026.pdf
🔒 LOCKED
IFRS 10 working paper preview
Enable one or more elimination sections to see your working paper render in real time.
Gross P&L Eliminations
revenue + interest + dividends + fees
PRIMARY
Journal Entries
sections enabled above
Net P&L Impact (UPII)
unrealised profit in inventory
Completeness
0/8
categories addressed
EXPORT (EMAIL TO UNLOCK)

Email unlocks the free download.

No payment required. Unlock above to download the full working paper.

Format
HTML → PDF
Pages
6–10
Price
FREE
or CtrlE

IFRS 10 intercompany eliminations in Australia: AASB 10 Consolidated Financial Statements (equivalent to IFRS 10, as adopted by the Australian Accounting Standards Board)

Australian groups prepare consolidated financial statements under AASB 10, which is the Australian equivalent of IFRS 10 and is identical in its requirements. AASB 10.B86 requires elimination of all intragroup assets, liabilities, equity, income, expenses, and cash flows. The Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) s.296 requires large proprietary companies and public companies to prepare financial reports in accordance with Australian Accounting Standards. For group entities, this means preparing consolidated financial statements that comply with AASB 10. Small proprietary companies are exempt from the reporting requirements under s.292 unless directed by ASIC or shareholders holding at least 5% of voting shares. Australia's group audit environment has its own characteristics. The Australian economy is concentrated in a relatively small number of large listed groups (ASX 200) audited predominantly by the Big 4, alongside a significant mid-market sector of proprietary company groups audited by mid-tier and smaller firms. Many Australian groups have operations in New Zealand, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific region, creating cross-border intercompany transactions that require foreign currency translation. The AUD's volatility against the USD, NZD, and various Asian currencies means that exchange differences on intercompany balances can be material and require careful treatment under AASB 121 (equivalent to IAS 21). Australian groups frequently use unit trusts and discretionary trusts in their ownership structures, particularly for property, investment management, and family-owned businesses. The consolidation of trust structures under AASB 10 requires assessment of whether the group controls the trust (through the trustee appointment power, the right to variable returns, and the ability to use power to affect those returns). Intercompany transactions between a corporate parent and a trust subsidiary (such as management fees, unit redemptions, and distribution flows) all require elimination at consolidation. The tax transparency of trusts adds complexity to the deferred tax implications of intercompany elimination.

Regulatory context: Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) for financial reporting enforcement; Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) for prudential regulation; Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (AUASB) for auditing standards

ASIC conducts financial reporting surveillance and publishes findings through its media releases and annual report on corporate finance regulation. ASIC's Report 768 (December 2023) on financial reporting surveillance identified consolidation and group accounting as focus areas. ASIC noted that some entities didn't properly assess the consolidation scope, particularly for structured entities and trusts, leading to incomplete consolidation and therefore incomplete intercompany elimination. ASIC has the power to direct companies to amend their financial statements under s.340 of the Corporations Act if consolidation errors are material. The Financial Reporting Council (FRC, Australia's audit oversight body, not to be confused with the UK FRC) and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission's audit inspection function review audit quality. In Australia, the Professional Standards legislation and ASIC's supervision of registered auditors provide the inspection framework. ASIC's audit inspection findings (published through reports such as ASIC Report 723) have identified group audit procedures as requiring improvement, including the assessment of the consolidation process and the completeness of intercompany elimination. The CA ANZ (Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand) and CPA Australia provide professional guidance through their member resources. The AUASB issues Australian auditing standards that are based on international ISAs. ASA 600 (Group Audits), based on ISA 600, governs the group auditor's responsibilities. The revised ASA 600, effective for periods beginning on or after 15 December 2024, strengthens the group auditor's responsibilities regarding the consolidation process, consistent with the international revision.

Practical guidance for Australia

For Australian groups, the Corporations Act 2001 provides consolidation exemptions for small proprietary companies under s.292. Medium and large proprietary companies controlled by foreign parents may also be eligible for relief under ASIC Class Order 98/1418 (now ASIC Corporations (Wholly-owned Companies) Instrument 2016/785), which grants reporting relief to wholly owned subsidiaries of foreign parents that prepare consolidated financial statements lodging them with ASIC. The auditor should verify that any entity claiming this relief meets all the conditions, including the deed of cross-guarantee requirement. The deed of cross-guarantee mechanism under ASIC Corporations (Wholly-owned Companies) Instrument 2016/785 is a distinctly Australian feature. Entities within a deed of cross-guarantee (commonly called a "closed group") guarantee each other's debts. For financial reporting purposes, the closed group must prepare a consolidated statement that eliminates all intercompany transactions between entities in the closed group. This creates a subset consolidation within the full group consolidation. The auditor must verify that intercompany eliminations are performed at both levels: within the closed group and at the full group level. For Australian groups with trust structures, obtain the trust deed for each consolidated trust and verify the basis for the consolidation assessment under AASB 10. Map the intercompany flows between corporate entities and trusts (management fees, unit issuances, distributions, loans) and process eliminations in the same way as for corporate subsidiaries. Trust distributions to the parent are the equivalent of intercompany dividends and eliminate at consolidation.

Audit expectations

ASIC expects auditors to perform sufficient work on the consolidation process as part of the group audit. Specific expectations include verifying the completeness of the consolidation scope (all controlled entities included), testing intercompany balance reconciliations with a focus on whether reconciling items are genuine, recalculating intercompany profit eliminations for material items, and assessing whether the client's consolidation software accurately processes the elimination entries. For ASX-listed groups, ASIC's financial reporting surveillance may include specific inquiries about the group's consolidation process and intercompany elimination policies.

Australia-specific considerations

The Australian tax consolidation regime (Division 701 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997) allows wholly owned Australian groups to consolidate for income tax purposes. Under a tax consolidated group, intercompany transactions between group members are disregarded for tax purposes (they're transactions within a single taxpayer). This parallels the financial reporting elimination but operates independently. The head entity of the tax consolidated group is liable for the group's tax. Tax funding agreements (TFAs) and tax sharing agreements (TSAs) govern how the tax cost is allocated between group members, creating intercompany payments that must be eliminated in the financial reporting consolidation. The Australian thin capitalisation rules (Division 820 of the ITAA 1997, reformed from 1 July 2024 to adopt an earnings-based test limiting net interest deductions to 30% of tax EBITDA) affect intercompany lending within Australian groups. If an Australian subsidiary has intercompany debt from an overseas parent, the thin capitalisation rules may deny a tax deduction for some of the intercompany interest. This creates a permanent difference that affects the entity-level tax charge but doesn't change the intercompany elimination mechanics. The intercompany loan and interest still eliminate in full at consolidation. Australian groups with New Zealand operations commonly have significant intercompany transaction volumes due to the close economic relationship. The Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition Arrangement facilitates cross-border business, but the different currencies (AUD and NZD) generate exchange differences on intercompany balances. The NZD/AUD exchange rate has historically been less volatile than other cross-border pairs, but the auditor should still verify the translation methodology and calculate the exchange difference on intercompany balances separately from operational variances.

Common inspection findings

- ASIC's financial reporting surveillance identified instances where groups didn't consolidate all controlled entities, particularly trust structures and special purpose vehicles, leading to incomplete intercompany elimination.

ASIC found that some listed groups didn't adequately disclose the deed of cross-guarantee arrangements and the related closed group consolidated statement, making it difficult for users to understand the intercompany guarantee structure.

Audit inspection findings noted that group auditors sometimes didn't verify the completeness of the intercompany population for groups with large numbers of subsidiaries, accepting the consolidation schedule without reconciling to entity-level general ledgers.

Inspectors identified cases where tax funding agreement payments within tax consolidated groups were not properly eliminated in the financial reporting consolidation, with the payments remaining as intercompany receivables and payables in the consolidated balance sheet.

ASIC noted that some auditors didn't adequately assess the foreign currency translation of intercompany balances with overseas subsidiaries, particularly whether intercompany loans qualified as part of the net investment in a foreign operation under AASB 121.15.

Frequently asked questions: Australia

- Q: How does the Australian tax consolidation regime affect intercompany elimination?
The tax consolidation disregards intercompany transactions for tax purposes, similar to how financial reporting consolidation eliminates them. But the two regimes operate independently. You still eliminate all intercompany transactions in the financial reporting consolidation per AASB 10.B86. The tax funding agreement payments (which allocate the tax cost between group members) are intercompany transactions that eliminate in the consolidated financial statements. The group's actual tax liability to the ATO remains in the consolidated tax charge.
What's the deed of cross-guarantee and how does it affect intercompany work?
Under ASIC Corporations (Wholly-owned Companies) Instrument 2016/785, entities in a "closed group" guarantee each other's debts and prepare a separate consolidated statement. You need to perform intercompany eliminations at two levels: within the closed group (for the closed group's consolidated statement, which is disclosed in the notes to the parent's financial statements) and at the full group level. Verify that all entities in the closed group are identified and that intercompany transactions within the closed group are eliminated in the closed group's consolidated statement.
Do I need to consolidate trusts in Australian group structures?
Consolidate trusts where the group controls them under AASB 10.5-8. Control is typically established through the power to appoint the trustee, exposure to variable returns (distributions, unit value changes), and the ability to use that power to affect returns. Many Australian groups control trusts used for property holding, investment, and employee share schemes. Intercompany transactions between the corporate parent and consolidated trusts (management fees, distributions, unit redemptions, loans) eliminate like any other intragroup transactions.
How does Australian transfer pricing affect intercompany elimination?
Australian transfer pricing rules (Division 815 of the ITAA 1997) require arm's length pricing for cross-border related party transactions. The transfer pricing doesn't change the consolidation elimination (you eliminate the full intercompany amount regardless of the pricing). However, if the ATO adjusts the transfer price, this creates a tax cost at the entity level that flows through to the consolidated tax charge. The financial reporting elimination uses the amounts actually recorded by the entities, not the tax-adjusted amounts.
Are there specific ASIC expectations for disclosing intercompany elimination policies?
AASB 10 doesn't require specific disclosure of the elimination methodology. However, AASB 12 (Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities) requires disclosure of significant judgements about whether the group controls another entity, the nature and risks associated with interests in subsidiaries, and the composition of the group. ASIC has indicated through its financial reporting surveillance that it expects groups to disclose their accounting policies for significant consolidation matters, including how they identify and eliminate intercompany transactions.

Get practical audit insights, weekly.

No exam theory. Just what makes audits run faster.

290+ guides published20 free toolsBuilt by practicing auditors

No spam. We’re auditors, not marketers.