Nepal Financial Reporting Standards
Nepal Financial Reporting Standards (NFRS) are a comprehensive set of accounting standards adopted in Nepal to govern the preparation and presentation of financial statements, ensuring transparency, comparability, and alignment with global best practices through convergence with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). Developed by the Accounting Standards Board (ASB) Nepal and issued by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nepal (ICAN), NFRS consist of Nepal Accounting Standards (NAS), specific NFRS, and interpretations such as IFRICs and SICs, providing a unified framework for entities ranging from publicly accountable organizations to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).[1][2][3] The development of NFRS began in the early 2010s as part of Nepal's efforts to modernize its financial reporting regime, with the first phase of implementation starting in the fiscal year 2014-15 for large entities such as listed multinational manufacturing companies and state-owned enterprises with significant capital.[2][4] Subsequent phases extended applicability to commercial banks and other financial institutions in 2015-16, and to insurance companies and smaller listed entities in 2016-17, with full mandatory adoption for SMEs delayed until the fiscal year 2024-25 (2081/82 BS) due to ongoing implementation challenges.[4][5] The current NFRS 2024 edition, issued in September 2024 and effective from July 16, 2025 (1 Shrawan 2082 BS), achieves full convergence with IFRS 2024 and incorporates 41 standards, 15 IFRIC interpretations, and 7 SICs, with NFRS 17 for insurance contracts effective from July 17, 2024.[6][7][3] NFRS are mandatory for entities with public accountability, including those with debt or equity traded publicly, banks, insurance companies, and government business enterprises, as well as significant private entities meeting thresholds such as borrowings of NPR 50 crore or more, assets of NPR 100 crore or more, over 300 employees, or turnover of NPR 100 crore or more.[4] For smaller entities, tailored versions exist: NFRS for SMEs (adopted in 2017, mandatory from fiscal year 2024-25) applies to non-publicly accountable businesses publishing general-purpose statements, while Nepal Accounting Standards for Micro Entities (NAS for MEs) targets those with turnover up to NPR 10 crore, borrowings up to NPR 5 crore, and assets up to NPR 10 crore.[2][4][5] This tiered structure promotes accessibility while maintaining high standards.[1]Background and Development
Historical Context
The accounting landscape in Nepal prior to the introduction of Nepal Financial Reporting Standards (NFRS) was characterized by rudimentary practices largely influenced by colonial-era British accounting principles and local customs, with no formal national standards until the early 2000s. Financial reporting was inconsistent, particularly among small and medium enterprises, relying on basic bookkeeping without comprehensive guidelines for recognition, measurement, or disclosure, which hindered transparency and comparability in an emerging economy.[8] Nepal's economic liberalization, initiated in the mid-1980s and accelerating in the 1990s following the restoration of multiparty democracy in 1990, significantly transformed the financial sector and underscored the need for standardized reporting. Policies such as the Industrial Policy of 1992 and the Foreign Investment and Technology Transfer Act of the same year opened doors to foreign direct investment (FDI) and private sector participation, leading to rapid expansion in banking and finance; for instance, the number of commercial banks grew from a handful of state-owned institutions to over a dozen private ones by the early 2000s. This influx of FDI, averaging about $8 million annually post-liberalization, and the deregulation of interest rates and privatization of public banks necessitated robust accounting frameworks to attract investors, ensure regulatory compliance, and manage risks in a diversifying economy. However, the absence of converged standards exposed gaps in reporting complex financial instruments and assets, particularly in the burgeoning banking sector.[9][10][11] The establishment of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nepal (ICAN) in 1997 under the Nepal Chartered Accountants Act marked a pivotal step toward professionalizing accounting. Following the formation of the Accounting Standards Board (ASB) in 2002, ICAN and ASB issued Nepal Accounting Standards (NAS) in the mid-2000s, drawing from International Accounting Standards (IAS) to cover basic areas such as presentation of financial statements, inventories, fixed assets, and cash flow statements, with initial standards becoming effective from July 16, 2004. These NAS, with 27 standards (19 mandatory and 8 voluntary) issued by 2008, aimed to align local practices with global norms but remained limited in scope, addressing only fundamental topics without full convergence to evolving international requirements. They proved insufficient for handling the intricacies of financial instruments, consolidations, and fair value measurements required by complex entities like banks.[12][13][14] This foundational yet basic NAS framework set the stage for the transition to NFRS, driven by global convergence pressures to enhance investor confidence and support Nepal's integration into international markets.[1]Regulatory Bodies and Adoption Process
The Accounting Standards Board (ASB) Nepal was established by the Government of Nepal on July 8, 2002, through an amendment to the Nepal Chartered Accountants Act, 1997, with the primary mandate to formulate accounting standards for financial statements in alignment with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).[15] The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nepal (ICAN) serves as the principal oversight body, responsible for pronouncing and enforcing these standards, while the ASB focuses on their development and technical convergence with IFRS issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).[2] This institutional framework addressed the limitations of the pre-existing Nepal Accounting Standards (NAS), which were based on outdated International Accounting Standards and lacked full international comparability, prompting a shift toward more robust, globally aligned reporting.[16] In 2012, ICAN and ASB committed to adopting IFRS-based Nepal Financial Reporting Standards (NFRS) to enhance transparency and financial stability in Nepal's economy, with a phased rollout announced to commence in 2014. Following this decision, the ASB published initial drafts of NFRS in 2013, enabling stakeholder consultations and preparations for implementation.[17] By 2014, the ASB issued the full set of NFRS, marking the formal adoption and replacing NAS for applicable entities on a transitional basis.[2] Subsequent updates ensured ongoing convergence; in 2018, the ASB introduced revised NFRS aligned with IFRS as of 2017, and by 2023, the complete suite was updated to converge with the 2018 versions of IFRS, as confirmed by the IASB. In September 2024, ICAN pronounced NFRS 2024, further aligning with the latest IFRS standards, with mandatory application from Shrawan 1, 2082 (approximately July 17, 2025).[1][6] A notable exception in the adoption process was NFRS 9 on Financial Instruments, which was uniquely mandated effective from July 16, 2015, ahead of other standards to prioritize stability in Nepal's financial sector, particularly for banks and insurers.[2] This early enforcement reflected the ASB's and ICAN's strategic focus on risk management in core financial reporting areas.[18]Conceptual Framework
Objectives of Financial Reporting
The core objective of financial reporting under the Nepal Financial Reporting Standards (NFRS) is to provide financial information about the reporting entity that is useful to existing and potential investors, lenders, and other creditors in making decisions relating to providing resources to the entity, such as buying, selling, or holding equity and debt instruments, and providing or settling loans and other forms of credit.[19][1] This information enables users to assess the entity's prospects for future net cash inflows, including its ability to generate those inflows and management's stewardship of the entity's economic resources.[19] To achieve this, NFRS requires financial statements to present a true and fair view of the entity's financial position, financial performance, and cash flows, drawing from principles that emphasize decision-usefulness.[2] Specific aims of NFRS financial reporting include enabling informed economic decisions by primary users—investors, creditors, and regulators—while promoting transparency, comparability, and accountability in financial statements.[3] These aims are supported by providing details on the entity's economic resources, claims against it, and changes therein, which help evaluate liquidity, solvency, and operational efficiency.[19] Relevance and faithful representation serve as foundational qualitative characteristics, ensuring that the information is capable of making a difference in user decisions and is complete, neutral, and free from error.[19] NFRS adopts the Conceptual Framework of the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), as issued by the IASB in 2018, to provide the foundation for its standards.[1][3] The Conceptual Framework was issued as part of NFRS 2018 and became effective on July 16, 2020, fully converged with the IFRS version without modification. This adoption supports enhanced financial transparency in Nepal's economy, facilitating better resource allocation and regulatory oversight for applicable entities, including those in the public sector.[1]Qualitative Characteristics and Elements
The qualitative characteristics of financial information under Nepal Financial Reporting Standards (NFRS) define the attributes that render financial reporting useful to users for economic decision-making. These characteristics are outlined in the Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting, which forms the foundation of NFRS and is aligned with international principles to ensure high-quality, reliable information.[3] The framework identifies two fundamental qualitative characteristics—relevance and faithful representation—that are essential for information to be decision-useful, supplemented by four enhancing characteristics that improve the usefulness of information meeting the fundamental criteria.[19] Relevance ensures that financial information can influence users' decisions by possessing predictive value, confirmatory value, or both, allowing users to assess past, present, or future events.[19] Materiality plays a key role here, as information is material if its omission or misstatement could reasonably affect users' decisions; this assessment is entity-specific and considers the nature or magnitude of the item.[19] Faithful representation, the second fundamental characteristic, requires information to completely, neutrally, and accurately depict the economic phenomena it purports to represent, with no material errors.[3] This includes completeness (all necessary information provided), neutrality (unbiased presentation), and freedom from error (no inaccuracies in depiction or measurement).[19] Enhancing qualitative characteristics support the fundamental ones without being sufficient on their own. Comparability enables users to identify and understand similarities and differences among items, whether across entities or time periods, and is improved through consistent accounting policies and disclosures.[19] Verifiability provides assurance that knowledgeable and independent observers could reach consensus on whether the information faithfully represents the underlying phenomena, achievable through direct (e.g., physical verification) or indirect (e.g., calculations) methods.[3] Timeliness ensures information is available to users in sufficient time to influence decisions, while understandability requires clear and concise presentation tailored to users with reasonable knowledge of business and economic activities, without sacrificing necessary detail.[19] The elements of financial statements under NFRS are the building blocks for recognizing and presenting economic activities, defined to capture inflows and outflows of economic benefits. Assets are present economic resources controlled by the entity as a result of past events, from which future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity.[3] Liabilities represent present obligations of the entity to transfer an economic resource as a result of past events, potentially leading to outflows of resources.[19] Equity is the residual interest in the assets of the entity after deducting all its liabilities, reflecting contributions from owners, accumulated earnings, and distributions.[3] Income encompasses increases in assets or decreases in liabilities that result in increases in equity, other than those from owner contributions, and includes revenues and gains.[19] Expenses, conversely, are decreases in assets or increases in liabilities that result in decreases in equity, other than distributions to owners, encompassing losses and outflows.[3] A key concept integrated into the NFRS framework is prudence, which embodies a cautious approach in exercising judgement under conditions of uncertainty to avoid overstatement of assets or income and understatement of liabilities or expenses.[19] This aligns with the overall aim of providing faithful representations that support informed decision-making by stakeholders.[1]Scope and Applicability
Entities Subject to NFRS
The Nepal Financial Reporting Standards (NFRS) apply to various entities based on their level of public accountability, size, and reporting needs, with full NFRS reserved for those requiring comprehensive disclosure to protect public interest users.[5] Entities with public accountability, such as listed companies whose debt or equity instruments are traded in a public market (or in the process of issuance, excluding certain microfinance institutions without economic significance), must prepare financial statements in accordance with full NFRS.[5] This category also includes banks, insurance companies, pension funds, mutual funds, and other entities holding assets in a fiduciary capacity as their primary business, as well as government business enterprises (GBEs) and public entities governed by special acts (excluding those using Nepal Public Sector Accounting Standards).[5] Additionally, entities deemed to have economic significance—meeting at least one of the following thresholds for two consecutive years—fall under full NFRS: annual turnover of NRs 1,000 million or more, total assets of NRs 1,000 million or more, borrowings of NRs 500 million or more, fiduciary assets of NRs 500 million or more, or more than 300 employees on average.[5] Public accountability under NFRS is narrowly defined to encompass situations where an entity's activities impact a wide range of external users, such as investors, creditors, and the public, thereby necessitating transparent and comparable financial reporting.[5] Purely private entities without such exposure, including small firms not meeting economic significance criteria, are excluded from full NFRS requirements.[5] For instance, commercial banks (including state-owned ones), listed state-owned enterprises with paid-up capital of at least NRs 5 billion, insurance companies, and other listed corporate bodies are explicitly categorized as having public accountability and thus subject to full NFRS.[2] Small and medium-sized entities (SMEs) without public accountability that publish general-purpose financial statements for external users are required to apply NFRS for SMEs, a simplified framework converged with IFRS for SMEs to reduce complexity while maintaining relevance.[1] These entities typically have annual turnover (or total assets, liabilities, or income, whichever is higher) between NRs 100 million and NRs 400 million, allowing them to avoid the full suite of recognition and measurement rules applicable to larger counterparts.[5] Examples include non-listed manufacturing firms or service providers meeting these size thresholds but not engaging in fiduciary activities or public trading.[5] Micro-entities, defined as those without public accountability and not qualifying as SMEs, are exempt from both full NFRS and NFRS for SMEs, instead using Nepal Accounting Standards for Micro Entities (NAS for MEs) for basic reporting.[5] To qualify, such entities must meet all of the following for two consecutive years: annual turnover of NRs 100 million or less, borrowings of NRs 50 million or less, total assets of NRs 100 million or less, and fiduciary assets of NRs 50 million or less.[5] This exemption targets very small businesses, such as local retail operations or sole proprietorships, enabling cash-basis or simplified accrual accounting without extensive disclosures.[5] The phased rollout of these standards has progressively incorporated these entity categories to align Nepal's reporting with international norms.[1]Phased Implementation Timeline
The implementation of Nepal Financial Reporting Standards (NFRS) occurred through a structured phased approach, beginning in the fiscal year 2014-15 to allow for gradual adoption across different entity categories while building necessary capacity. This timeline was designed by the Accounting Standards Board (ASB) under the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nepal (ICAN) to align Nepal's financial reporting with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), starting with entities having public accountability.[2] Phase 1, effective from the fiscal year 2014-15, mandated NFRS compliance for Type A entities, specifically listed manufacturing and multinational companies as well as listed state-owned enterprises with a minimum paid-up capital of NPR 5 billion (excluding banks and financial institutions regulated under the Banks and Financial Institutions Act, 2006). These entities, characterized by significant public interest and complex operations, were prioritized to enhance transparency in key economic sectors.[2][4] Phase 2 followed in the fiscal year 2015-16, requiring adoption by Type B entities, including commercial banks (both private and state-owned) and other listed state-owned enterprises. This phase focused on the financial sector, where robust reporting was critical for stability and investor confidence. A key milestone within this phase was the early enforcement of NFRS 9 (Financial Instruments) from July 16, 2015, specifically for banks, to address immediate needs in accounting for financial assets and liabilities ahead of full standard rollout.[2][20] Phase 3, implemented in the fiscal year 2016-17, extended NFRS to Type C entities, comprising insurance companies, other financial institutions, remaining listed companies, and large non-listed corporate entities with borrowings of at least NPR 500 million (excluding SMEs). This broader application covered a wider range of public-interest entities, marking substantial progress toward nationwide convergence with IFRS.[2][4] The SME phase began with the introduction of NFRS for SMEs in the fiscal year 2019-20, tailored for smaller entities without public accountability to simplify compliance while maintaining core IFRS principles. However, full mandatory adoption faced delays attributed to training needs and capacity constraints among accountants and businesses, with voluntary compliance in 2023-24 and mandatory enforcement from the fiscal year 2024-25 (FY 2081/82). In 2024, ICAN pronounced NFRS 2024, effective for annual periods beginning on or after July 16, 2025 (Shrawan 1, 2082), achieving convergence with IFRS Standards as of 2024.[2][21][22][23][6]| Phase | Fiscal Year | Key Entity Types Affected |
|---|---|---|
| 1 (Type A) | 2014-15 | Listed manufacturing/multinational companies; large listed SOEs (non-banking) |
| 2 (Type B) | 2015-16 | Commercial banks; other listed SOEs (with early NFRS 9 for banks) |
| 3 (Type C) | 2016-17 | Insurance companies; other financial institutions; large non-listed corporates |
| SME | 2019-20 (introduced; voluntary 2023-24, mandatory from 2024-25) | Small and medium-sized entities without public accountability |