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Revaluation model

The revaluation model is an alternative to historical cost that restates property, plant and equipment to fair value, with the uplift recorded in a revaluation reserve within equity rather than in profit or loss.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

FrameworkIAS 16

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A building's carrying amount of €900,000 is restated to a valuer's fair value of €1,050,000, a €150,000 revaluation surplus. Rather than boosting profit, the surplus is credited to a revaluation reserve within equity, and depreciation going forward rises from €60,000 to €70,000 a year on the higher value.

Where it fits
SubjectFinancial AccountingAdvancedTopicAsset Measurement & ValuationAdvanced

The formula

LaTeX
Revaluation surplus=FVCA\text{Revaluation surplus} = FV - CA

Variables

Fair value at the revaluation date, from an independent valuation ()
Carrying amount immediately before the revaluation ()

The upward adjustment recognised in a revaluation reserve within equity, not in profit or loss.

LaTeX
Dnew=FVnD_{new} = \dfrac{FV}{n}

Variables

Revised annual depreciation charge ()
Fair value recorded at the revaluation date ()
Remaining useful life at the revaluation date (years)

Depreciation is recalculated on the new carrying amount over the useful life still remaining after revaluation.

Revaluation model — Edlintics Glossary