The Accounting Standards Committee (ASC) has released Amendments to SFRS(I) 19 Subsidiaries without Public Accountability: Disclosures and Amendments to FRS 119 Subsidiaries and Small Entities without Public Accountability: Disclosures.
These amendments are effective for annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2027.

Overview of the Amendments

The updated standards refine the disclosure framework for:

  • Subsidiaries applying SFRS(I) 19 under the SFRS(I) reporting framework; and
  • Subsidiaries and small entities applying FRS 119 under the FRS framework.

The amendments aim to:

  • Further align reduced-disclosure standards with the latest global IFRS for SMEs and reduced-disclosure frameworks.
  • Balance transparency with reporting efficiency for entities without public accountability.
  • Streamline disclosure requirements while retaining decision-useful information for users of financial statements.

Key Impacts on Preparers

1. Enhanced Alignment With Full Standards

Although the disclosure burden remains significantly reduced, preparers should expect:

  • Updated disclosure lists reflecting changes in underlying SFRS(I)/FRS standards.
  • Additional clarifications on measurement and presentation requirements where necessary.

2. Potential System and Process Adjustments

Entities may need to:

  • Update internal reporting templates, disclosure checklists, note formats, and year-end workflows.
  • Review consolidation processes for subsidiaries electing the reduced-disclosure option to ensure consistency with group-level reporting.
  • Evaluate whether existing systems capture the minimum required disclosure data.

3. Impact on Group Reporting Policies

Groups with subsidiaries using SFRS(I) 19 or FRS 119 may need to reassess:

  • Group policies on which entities adopt reduced disclosures.
  • Interactions between reduced-disclosure financial statements and group audits.
  • Whether disclosure changes affect covenant reporting or regulatory filings.

Practical Issues for Implementation

1. Transition Planning

Although effective from 2027, entities should:

  • Start assessing impacts during FY2025–2026 to allow for systems updates, training, and audit planning.
  • Conduct gap analyses against current disclosure practices.

2. Auditor Considerations

Audit teams may need:

  • Updated audit programs for evaluating compliance with the amended standards.
  • Enhanced documentation around judgments where disclosure exemptions are applied.

3. Stakeholder Communication

Entities using the reduced-disclosure route should inform:

  • Parent companies (for consolidation purposes)
  • Lenders or counterparties relying on financial statements
    particularly if disclosures change materially.

Source: ACRA, 11 November 2025