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IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements - The Practical Way

IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements - The Practical Way

Introduction to IAS 1 in the UAE Corporate Tax Environment

With UAE corporate tax now live, IAS 1 has moved from an accounting nice-to-have to a tax-critical standard for businesses preparing IFRS financial statements in the UAE.

In the UAE, IFRS-based financial statements are now the default basis for calculating taxable income under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 and Ministerial Decision No. 114 of 2023 issued by the Ministry of Finance, with IFRS or IFRS for SMEs required for most taxable persons.

What IAS 1 Covers Under IFRS

IAS 1 sets the overall framework for how IFRS financial statements are structured: required primary statements, minimum line items, fair presentation, going concern, accrual basis, and consistency of presentation between periods. Clear structure is now essential because taxable profit starts from your IFRS net profit figure.

Who Must Comply with IAS 1 in the UAE

The standard applies to UAE mainland and Free Zone entities that prepare financial statements in accordance with IFRS or IFRS for SMEs for corporate tax, banking, regulatory, or investor reporting. This includes taxable persons under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 and Qualifying Free Zone Persons, who must maintain IFRS-based audited financials for the Federal Tax Authority and Free Zone authorities.

Common IAS 1 Compliance Mistakes in the UAE

Incorrect Financial Statement Formats

Using outdated formats that do not show all required primary statements (such as statement of changes in equity) or mixing cash-basis and accrual-basis items.

Misclassification of Financial Activities

Classifying items incorrectly between operating, investing, and financing activities, which affects how lenders and tax authorities read performance.

Missing Disclosures and Accounting Policies

Omitting key accounting policies or judgements, making it hard for auditors, investors, or the FTA to understand how figures were derived.

Key IAS 1 Disclosures UAE Businesses Must Include

  • A complete set of financial statements prepared under IFRS, including notes, presented at least annually.
  • Clear disclosure of significant accounting policies and key sources of estimation uncertainty that affect taxable income.
  • Information about going concerns assessment, capital management, and any material reclassifications or restatements between periods.


Practical Steps to Ensure IAS 1 Compliance

  • Map your existing trial balance and reports to an IAS 1-compliant financial statement layout aligned with UAE MoF guidance on IFRS.
  • Update accounting policies and internal checklists so that presentation and disclosures are consistent across all group entities in the UAE.
  • Engage advisors to perform an IAS 1 presentation review before your first full corporate tax filing based on IFRS numbers.


FAQs on IAS 1 and UAE Corporate Tax

Do all UAE companies have to follow IAS 1?

Most mainland and Free Zone businesses preparing IFRS or IFRS for SMEs financials for UAE corporate tax or audit must follow IAS 1’s structure, even if they are privately owned.

How does IAS 1 link to corporate tax?

IAS 1 determines the starting point profit figure and disclosures that the FTA and Ministry of Finance expect when reviewing your corporate tax computations.

Can I keep my old financial statement format?

If it does not fully comply with IAS 1 and current IFRS requirements, you risk audit issues, bank pushback, and corporate tax challenges in the UAE.

How Nexdigm Can Help with IAS 1 Compliance

Nexdigm’s IFRS and tax specialists help UAE businesses redesign financial statements, align IAS 1 presentation with MoF and FTA expectations, and streamline audit-readiness. Contact us to review your IFRS formats or download our IAS 1 UAE whitepaper to benchmark your current financial statement structure.

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