Accounting Standards Update Adoption Checklist

Steps a corporate accounting team or external CPA firm runs to adopt a new FASB Accounting Standards Update — scoping, transition-method election, technical analysis across revenue, leases, and CECL, and the presentation and sign-off nee...

1

Scoping and Transition Method

  1. Identify applicable ASUs from the codification
    • Pull the FASB ASU index and flag every update with an effective date in the current or next fiscal year. Don't rely on an old list — the FASB issues 10-15 ASUs annually and a missed amendment to ASC 842 or ASC 326 has been a common restatement trigger for SMB filers.

  2. Confirm the effective date for the entity
    • Public business entities (PBEs) adopt earlier than private companies for almost every recent ASU — confirm the entity's filer status before locking the timeline. ASC 326 (CECL) and ASC 842 had multi-year staggered adoption windows that tripped up cross-status filers.

  3. Select the transition method
    • Most recent ASUs allow a choice between full retrospective (recast all comparative periods) and modified retrospective (cumulative-effect adjustment to opening retained earnings). The decision drives whether prior-period statements must be restated and how the audit firm will scope its work.

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  4. Kick off with audit firm and finance leads
    • Walk the controller, CFO, and engagement partner through the elected method, the proposed PBC list, and the target sign-off date. Surface any independence concerns up front — the firm cannot assist with the technical accounting memo for an audit client without breaching SSARS / AICPA independence rules.

2

Revenue Recognition (ASC 606)

  1. Inventory revenue contracts in scope
    • Export the customer master and pull every active contract, MSA, and standing PO. Group by revenue stream (subscription, professional services, product, license) — the five-step model gets applied per stream, not per individual contract, for representative analysis.

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  2. Apply the five-step model to each revenue stream
    • Walk each stream through the five steps: identify the contract, identify performance obligations, determine the transaction price, allocate the price, recognize revenue when (or as) each obligation is satisfied. Document conclusions in a memo per stream — auditors will tie individual contracts back to the stream-level memo.

  3. Identify performance obligations and allocate SSP
    • Distinct goods and services get separate performance obligations and an allocation of standalone selling price. Bundled SaaS + implementation is the most common gotcha — implementation is often distinct, not part of the subscription POB, and gets recognized over the implementation period rather than ratably with the subscription.

  4. Document variable-consideration constraints
    • Rebates, volume discounts, milestone bonuses, and refund rights are variable consideration. Estimate using either the expected-value or most-likely-amount method, then apply the constraint — only include amounts where a significant reversal is not probable. Document the method choice; auditors will challenge inconsistency between similar contracts.

3

Lease Accounting (ASC 842)

  1. Build the complete lease inventory across entities
    • Pull rent-expense GL detail, AP vendor history, and the property roster. Cross-reference to legal entities — intercompany leases get eliminated in consolidation but still appear on stand-alone statements. Equipment and vehicle leases are routinely missed because they hit the income statement as expense rather than as a recognizable lease line.

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  2. Identify embedded leases in service contracts
    • Hosting, logistics, and equipment-as-a-service contracts often grant a right to control an identified asset — that's an embedded lease under ASC 842. Common examples: dedicated server racks at a colo provider, dedicated trucking under a 3PL agreement, dedicated production lines at a contract manufacturer.

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  3. Separate lease and non-lease components
    • Allocate the contract consideration between the lease component (right of use) and non-lease components (services, maintenance) based on standalone prices. The practical expedient to combine the two is an accounting policy election by class of asset — document the election, then apply consistently.

  4. Calculate ROU asset and lease liability at transition
    • Use the incremental borrowing rate (IBR) at the transition date for each lease unless an implicit rate is readily determinable. Document the IBR build-up — risk-free rate plus credit spread plus collateralization adjustment. A flat 5% rate across all leases is a common audit comment.

4

Financial Instruments (ASC 326 — CECL)

  1. Segment receivables and HTM debt into risk pools
    • Group financial assets by similar risk characteristics — customer industry, credit rating, geography, product type, aging bucket. CECL requires expected loss estimation at the pool level when assets share characteristics; only individually-significant impaired items get assessed individually.

  2. Build the CECL allowance with reasonable forecasts
    • Combine historical loss experience, current conditions, and a reasonable-and-supportable forecast period (typically 12-24 months for SMB filers) before reverting to historical. Document the forecast inputs — unemployment rate, GDP, sector default rates — so the same model can be re-run each period.

  3. Document the day-1 cumulative-effect adjustment
    • Calculate the difference between the prior incurred-loss allowance and the new CECL allowance. The day-1 delta posts net of tax to opening retained earnings under modified retrospective. Build the workpaper with a tie-out from the prior allowance roll-forward — this is the single most-tested workpaper in adoption-year audits.

5

Presentation, Disclosure, and Sign-Off

  1. Recast comparative periods under full retrospective
    • Restate each comparative period presented as if the new standard had always applied. Update the prior-year balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow, plus the three-year selected financial data if presented. Coordinate with the auditor on whether they will reissue an opinion on the prior-year statements.

  2. Draft the transition footnote disclosures
    • Required disclosures: nature of the change, transition method elected, practical expedients used, line-item impact of adoption, and qualitative description of changes to processes and controls. Pull boilerplate from an SEC filer in the same industry as a starting point, then tailor — generic disclosure language is a recurring SEC comment letter target.

  3. Walk auditors through the adoption memo
    • Schedule a working session with the engagement partner and audit manager. Walk the technical memo, the policy elections, the day-1 adjustment workpaper, and the disclosure draft. Resolving auditor concerns before fieldwork avoids reopening the close.

  4. Capture controller and CFO sign-off
    • Final sign-off package: the technical memo, the day-1 AJE with supporting workpapers, the updated chart of accounts mapping, and the disclosure draft. Capture both signatures and any conditions or follow-up items the controller or CFO wants addressed in subsequent quarters.

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