Accounting Policies: Definition, Use, and Examples Key takeaways
* Accounting policies are the procedures and methods management uses to prepare financial statements.
* Policies implement accounting principles (GAAP or IFRS) but allow management discretion where rules are flexible.
* Choices in accounting policies can legitimately affect reported earnings and indicate whether management is conservative or aggressive.
* Investors and auditors should review a company’s accounting policy disclosures to assess the quality of earnings.
What are accounting policies? Accounting policies are the specific methods, measurement bases, and disclosure practices a company applies when preparing its financial statements. They translate accounting principles and standards (such as GAAP or IFRS) into the company’s day-to-day reporting rules—for example, how depreciation is calculated or how inventory is valued. How accounting policies are used Accounting policies govern treatment of complex or judgmental items, including:
Depreciation and amortization methods
Inventory valuation methods
Recognition and measurement of goodwill and impairments
Capitalization versus expense of research and development costs
Valuation of investments and fixed assets
Foreign currency translation and hedge accounting
These policies must conform to the applicable accounting framework (e.g., GAAP or IFRS), but where standards allow choices, management selects the policy that best reflects its circumstances—or that produces the financial presentation it prefers. Explore More Resources

Example: inventory valuation (FIFO, LIFO, average cost) Inventory valuation methods are a common area where policy choice affects reported profit. Scenario:
Purchases: 10 units at $10, 10 units at $12 (total 20 units)
Units sold during the period: 15 Explore More Resources

Calculations:
FIFO (first in, first out): COGS = (10 × $10) + (5 × $12) = $160
Average cost: weighted average unit cost = ($100 + $120) / 20 = $11 → COGS = 15 × $11 = $165
LIFO (last in, first out): COGS = (10 × $12) + (5 × $10) = $170 When inventory prices are rising:
FIFO yields lower COGS and higher reported profit.
* LIFO yields higher COGS and lower reported profit (and lower taxable income under some tax regimes). Explore More Resources

Note: U.S. GAAP permits LIFO; IFRS does not. Accounting policies vs. accounting principles
* Accounting principles are the standardized rules and objectives set by standard setters (e.g., FASB, IASB).
* Accounting policies are the specific choices and procedures management adopts to comply with those principles. Principles set the framework; policies operationalize it.
Conservative vs. aggressive accounting
* Conservative policies tend to understate assets or income (higher expenses, earlier expense recognition), which may produce lower earnings in the short term but fewer surprises later.
* Aggressive policies tend to overstate assets or income (lower expenses, delayed expense recognition), which can boost short-term reported performance but may create future reversals or increased risk.
The chosen stance affects investor perception, credit assessments, and trend comparability.
Implications for stakeholders
* Investors: Review the notes to the financial statements to understand policies and how they affect comparability and earnings quality.
* Analysts: Adjust or normalize financials when different policy choices materially affect performance comparisons across firms.
* Auditors and regulators: Ensure policies comply with applicable standards and are applied consistently and transparently.
* Management: Should select and disclose policies that faithfully represent the company’s financial position and performance.
Best practices
* Disclose material accounting policies clearly in the financial statement notes.
* Apply policies consistently from period to period; disclose and justify any changes.
* Provide quantitative sensitivity or reconciliation where policy choices materially affect results.
* For users of financial statements, check policy disclosures before drawing conclusions from reported figures.
Conclusion Accounting policies are the practical choices companies make to apply accounting standards. They play a major role in how financial performance and position are presented. Understanding and reviewing these policies—especially in areas that require judgment—helps stakeholders assess the reliability and comparability of reported financial information. Explore More Resources