How to Account for Business Combinations: The Complete Australian Guide for 2026

Author

Gracie Sinclair

Category

Date

20 October 2025
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The information provided in this article is general in nature and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. While we strive for accuracy, Australian tax laws change frequently. Always consult with a qualified professional before making decisions based on this content. Our team cannot be held liable for actions taken based on this information.
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Picture this: Your creative agency just landed the deal of a lifetime—acquiring a complementary business that'll take your operation from garage band to stadium tour. The adrenaline's pumping, the paperwork's stacking up, and suddenly you're staring down the barrel of AASB 3 Business Combinations wondering if you need a degree in rocket science just to record the transaction.

Here's the reality check: accounting for business combinations is one of the most complex challenges in financial reporting, but getting it right is absolutely critical. One wrong move in your purchase price allocation, and you could be looking at years of incorrect depreciation, dodgy goodwill figures, and financial statements that sound about as harmonious as a guitar tuned by a toddler. With Australia's M&A market hitting US$92.3 billion in 2024—a 30% jump from the previous year—and new mandatory merger control rules kicking in from 1 January 2026, understanding how to properly account for business combinations isn't just important, it's essential.

Whether you're acquiring a business, being acquired, or advising clients through the process, this guide will help you navigate the Australian accounting standards without losing your mind (or your shirt).

What Actually Qualifies as a Business Combination Under AASB 3?

Before you can account for business combinations, you need to nail down whether you've actually got one on your hands. Under AASB 3 (the Australian standard incorporating IFRS 3), a business combination is "a transaction or other event in which an acquirer obtains control of one or more businesses."

But here's where it gets interesting: not every acquisition is a business combination. Sometimes you're just buying assets, like picking up a new amp and pedals rather than acquiring an entire band.

The Business vs. Asset Test

A business needs three key elements working together like a tight rhythm section:

  • Inputs (resources like employees, intellectual property, access to materials)
  • Processes (systems and protocols that transform inputs)
  • Outputs (ability to provide returns to investors)

The 2015 amendments to AASB 3 clarified that you don't necessarily need all three components. At minimum, you need an input and a substantive process that together have the ability to create outputs. Think of it like this: even if your acquired business hasn't released an album yet (outputs), if they've got the musicians (inputs) and recording processes in place, you've likely got a business.

The concentration test shortcut: If substantially all the fair value you're acquiring sits in a single asset or group of similar assets, you're probably looking at an asset acquisition, not a business combination. It's like buying a vintage guitar collection—valuable, sure, but not a functional band.

What's Excluded from AASB 3?

Not everything hits the stage under AASB 3. The standard explicitly excludes:

  • Formation of joint ventures
  • Business combinations between entities under common control (like restructures within the same group)
  • Investment entities acquiring subsidiaries measured at fair value
  • Asset acquisitions that don't meet the definition of a business

Understanding this distinction matters because asset acquisitions follow completely different rules—you capitalise transaction costs rather than expensing them, and you don't recognise goodwill or perform fair value adjustments the same way.

How Do You Apply the Acquisition Method for Business Combinations?

Once you've confirmed you're dealing with a genuine business combination, AASB 3 requires you to use the acquisition method. This isn't optional—it’s the only game in town. Think of it as the standard tuning everyone uses; sure, you could experiment with drop D, but everyone needs to be reading from the same sheet music.

The acquisition method involves five critical steps that need to be executed with precision:

Step 1: Identify the Acquirer

Someone's got to be calling the shots, and that entity is your acquirer—the one who obtains control. Usually, this is straightforward: whoever's handing over the cash typically gets control. But accounting loves to keep us on our toes.

Control assessment follows AASB 10 guidance and looks at factors like:

  • Who's transferring consideration (cash, shares, assets)
  • Relative size of the combining entities
  • Voting rights and board composition
  • Who initiated the transaction

Watch out for reverse acquisitions: Sometimes the legal subsidiary is actually the accounting acquirer. This happens when a smaller listed shell company acquires a larger private business—legally, the shell is the parent, but for accounting purposes, the private business is the acquirer. It's like when the opening act becomes more famous than the headliner.

Step 2: Determine the Acquisition Date

The acquisition date is when control actually transfers, not necessarily when contracts are signed. This is typically the closing date, but if you start running the business before legal transfer is complete, that earlier date might be your acquisition date. Getting this wrong affects everything downstream, so pay attention.

Step 3: Recognise and Measure Identifiable Assets, Liabilities, and Non-Controlling Interests

This is where accounting for business combinations gets seriously technical. You need to recognise separately from goodwill:

  • All identifiable assets acquired
  • All liabilities assumed
  • Any non-controlling interests (if you're acquiring less than 100%)

The recognition principle: You recognise assets and liabilities even if the acquiree never recorded them. For example, that valuable customer database they built organically? If it's identifiable and measurable, it goes on your balance sheet as an intangible asset.

The measurement principle: Everything gets measured at acquisition-date fair value. This is a complete "fresh start"—you're not carrying forward the acquiree's book values, accumulated depreciation, or historical cost. It's like getting a completely new setlist rather than playing their old arrangements.

Identifying Intangible Assets: The Hidden Value

This is where acquisitions often hide serious value (and where accountants earn their fees). You might recognise intangible assets the acquiree never recorded, including:

  • Brand names and trademarks
  • Customer relationships and contracts
  • Technology and patents
  • Non-compete agreements
  • Order backlog

For an intangible asset to be recognised separately from goodwill, it must be "identifiable," meaning it satisfies either:

Separability criterion: The asset can be separated from the business and sold, licensed, or exchanged, either alone or with a related contract. Evidence of similar market transactions helps here.

Contractual-legal criterion: The asset arises from contractual or legal rights, regardless of whether those rights are transferable.

If an intangible doesn't meet either test (like your assembled workforce or anticipated synergies), it gets rolled into goodwill instead.

Non-Controlling Interests: A Critical Choice

When you're acquiring less than 100% of a business, you've got to measure non-controlling interests (NCI) using one of two methods:

  1. Fair value method: Measure NCI at full fair value, which typically means 100% of goodwill gets recognised ("full goodwill method")
  2. Proportionate method: Measure NCI as their proportionate share of identifiable net assets, so you only recognise goodwill for your ownership percentage

This choice must be made transaction by transaction, and it significantly affects both your goodwill and NCI balances. The fair value method cranks both figures up, whilst the proportionate method keeps things more conservative.

Step 4: Calculate Goodwill (or Bargain Purchase Gain)

Here's the formula that determines whether you've paid a premium or scored a bargain:

Goodwill = Consideration transferred + Fair value of NCI + Fair value of previously held equity interest - Net identifiable assets acquired at fair value

Goodwill represents all those intangible future economic benefits you're acquiring that can't be separately identified—the going concern value, synergies, assembled workforce, and expected benefits from combining the businesses. It's why the whole band is worth more than the sum of individual musicians.

Once recognised, goodwill isn't amortised but must be tested annually for impairment under AASB 136. If your acquisition hits a sour note and goodwill becomes impaired, you're writing that value down through profit or loss.

Bargain purchases: Occasionally, the fair value of net identifiable assets exceeds what you paid. Before recognising a gain, you need to verify:

  • All identifiable assets and liabilities have been identified
  • Fair value measurements are correct
  • You've genuinely scored a bargain (not made a valuation error)

If confirmed, the excess is recognised immediately in profit or loss. It's like buying a vintage Stratocaster at a garage sale for £50—double-check it's real before celebrating.

Step 5: Account for Consideration Transferred

Consideration transferred includes everything you're giving up to acquire control:

  • Cash payments
  • Equity instruments issued (shares, options)
  • Assets transferred
  • Liabilities assumed
  • Contingent consideration (earnouts based on future performance)

All consideration is measured at acquisition-date fair value. For deferred payments, this means present value. For share consideration, it's the fair value of shares at acquisition date.

How Do You Handle Contingent Consideration and Earnouts?

Contingent consideration—often structured as earnouts—has become increasingly popular in Australia's M&A market. This is where things get properly interesting (and complex).

Deferred vs. Contingent Consideration

Deferred consideration is an unconditional obligation to pay a fixed amount at a future date. You know you're paying $500,000 in 12 months regardless of what happens. This gets measured at present value and included in the purchase price.

Contingent consideration depends on future events—usually the acquired business hitting certain performance targets (revenue milestones, EBITDA targets, customer retention metrics). The seller might earn anywhere from zero to several million depending on performance.

The Critical Classification Decision

How you classify contingent consideration affects everything:

Classified as a liability (if settled in cash or variable shares):

  • Initially measure at fair value
  • Remeasure at fair value each reporting period
  • Changes flow through profit or loss (creating earnings volatility)

Classified as equity (if settled with fixed number of shares):

  • Initially measure at fair value
  • Never remeasure—stays in equity permanently
  • No subsequent earnings impact

Earnouts vs. Compensation: The Make-or-Break Distinction

Here's where many businesses trip up when accounting for business combinations: distinguishing earnouts (part of consideration) from compensation for future services (not part of consideration).

It's contingent consideration if:

  • Payment is earned regardless of employment status
  • Not forfeited if recipient leaves the business
  • Linked purely to business performance metrics

It's compensation if:

  • Payment is forfeited if recipient's employment terminates (determinative indicator)
  • Required employment period equals or exceeds earnout period
  • Clearly tied to future service requirements

The distinction matters enormously. Earnouts go into your goodwill calculation and get remeasured through profit or loss. Compensation gets expensed as incurred post-acquisition. Getting this wrong means your goodwill figure is incorrect, your post-acquisition expenses are wrong, and you're potentially misleading financial statement users.

Fair Value Measurement Challenges

Valuing contingent consideration requires sophisticated modelling:

  • Probability-weighted expected return method for linear payoffs
  • Option-based models (Black-Scholes) for financial metrics with thresholds or caps
  • Monte Carlo simulation for complex, multi-period earnouts with interdependent metrics

Key inputs include probability of achieving targets, range of outcomes, discount rates reflecting time value and counterparty credit risk, and volatility assumptions. These are typically Level 3 fair value measurements requiring significant judgment.

What About Acquisition Costs and Separate Transactions?

Not everything gets rolled into your business combination accounting. Understanding what's in and what's out is crucial.

Acquisition-Related Costs: Expense Them

Unlike asset acquisitions where you capitalise directly attributable costs, business combination costs are expensed as incurred. This includes:

  • Legal and advisory fees
  • Due diligence costs
  • Valuation fees
  • Finder's fees
  • Accounting and consulting fees

Exception: Debt and equity issuance costs follow their own rules under AASB 132 and AASB 9 respectively.

This means your profit or loss takes a hit when you're acquiring businesses, but it also means you're not inflating goodwill with costs that don't represent future economic benefits.

Separate Transactions: Not Part of the Combination

Some arrangements during acquisition negotiations are actually separate transactions that need to be accounted for independently:

Settlement of pre-existing relationships: If you had an existing supply contract or pending litigation with the acquiree, settling that is separate from the acquisition itself. These get settled at fair value (or contractual settlement amount).

Employee compensation for future services: Stay bonuses, future service commitments, and similar arrangements are compensation expense, not consideration. They're accounted for under AASB 119 or as straight compensation expense.

Reimbursements: If the acquiree reimburses your acquisition costs, that's a cost reduction, not consideration.

The assessment factors:

  • Why was the transaction entered into?
  • Who initiated it (acquirer vs. acquiree/seller)?
  • When was it negotiated (before vs. during acquisition discussions)?

Acquirer-initiated transactions that primarily benefit the acquirer or combined entity are usually separate. Acquiree-initiated transactions that primarily benefit the seller are usually part of the combination.

What Special Considerations Apply to Step Acquisitions and Other Complex Transactions?

Business combinations come in various flavours, each with their own accounting quirks.

Business Combinations Achieved in Stages (Step Acquisitions)

When you already hold an equity interest and subsequently obtain control, AASB 3 requires:

  1. Remeasure your previously held equity interest to fair value at acquisition date
  2. Recognise the resulting gain or loss in profit or loss (or OCI if appropriate)
  3. Include the fair value of your previous interest as additional consideration in the goodwill calculation

Example: You held 30% at a cost of $200,000. At acquisition date when you buy the remaining 70%, that 30% has a fair value of $350,000. You recognise a $150,000 gain in profit or loss, and include $350,000 (not $200,000) in calculating goodwill.

Business Combinations Without Transfer of Consideration

Control can be obtained without paying anything:

  • Acquiree repurchases sufficient shares causing you to obtain control
  • Minority veto rights lapse
  • Contract-alone combinations (stapling arrangements, dual-listed structures)

The acquisition method still applies—you just don't have traditional consideration to work with.

Common Control Transactions

Business combinations between entities under common control (like group restructures) are outside the scope of AASB 3. These typically use "book value accounting":

  • No remeasurement to fair value
  • No goodwill recognition
  • Assets and liabilities at carrying amounts

How Does the Measurement Period Work?

Rarely is business combination accounting complete on day one. AASB 3 provides a measurement period of up to 12 months after acquisition to finalise your accounting.

Key Features of the Measurement Period

Duration: Cannot exceed one year from acquisition date but ends earlier if you obtain all required information.

Adjustments: You retrospectively adjust provisional amounts if new information reveals facts and circumstances that existed at acquisition date. This means restating comparative financial statements.

What qualifies: New information about facts/circumstances at acquisition date (like completing valuations of identifiable intangibles, finalising tax positions, identifying previously unrecognised assets or liabilities).

What doesn't qualify: Information about post-acquisition performance or events. If the acquired business underperforms after acquisition, that's not a measurement period adjustment—it potentially indicates goodwill impairment, which is accounted for under AASB 136.

Practical Application

Let's say you provisionally valued customer relationships at $100,000 with a 5-year useful life as of 1 January 2025. On 28 February 2026, independent valuation assesses fair value at $200,000. In your 30 June 2026 financial statements:

  • Adjust 2025 comparative: Increase customer relationships by $100,000, decrease goodwill by $100,000
  • Adjust 2025 depreciation: Increase by $20,000 (additional depreciation on the step-up)
  • Adjust 2026 current period depreciation to reflect new fair value

Understanding Australian M&A and Regulatory Context for 2026

Australia's M&A landscape directly impacts how you'll account for business combinations. In 2024, Australia saw 996 deals totalling US$92.3 billion—the highest deal value since 2019 (excluding the post-pandemic 2021 spike). Foreign buyers participated in 43% of deals, often paying premiums (average 64% vs. 43% for Australian bidders).

Sector Hotspots

  • Energy & Resources: 41% of all deals, driven by gold, critical minerals, and energy transition
  • Software & IT Services: 11%, up significantly from prior years
  • Private Equity: US$34.5 billion across 168 deals

Major 2024 transactions included Blackstone's US$16.2 billion acquisition of Airtrunk (data centres) and Northern Star Resources' US$3.2 billion acquisition of De Grey Mining.

New Mandatory Merger Control Regime

From 1 January 2026, Australia shifts from voluntary to mandatory ACCC notification for qualifying mergers. This means:

  • Certain deals must obtain ACCC approval before completion
  • Failure to obtain approval may render the acquisition void
  • Significant penalties for non-compliance
  • Expected surge in late-2025 deals to beat the deadline

For accountants, this creates additional complexity around acquisition dates, contingent structuring, and potentially unwinding transactions if approval is denied.

Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB)

In 2024, 41% of deals required FIRB approval—the highest percentage in five years. Recent improvements include shorter response times and clearer processes, but FIRB scrutiny remains intense, particularly for:

  • Critical minerals and resources
  • Foreign state-owned entities
  • Sensitive sectors (technology, infrastructure, agriculture)

Key Business Combination Accounting Challenges

Based on real-world practice, here are the most common challenges when accounting for business combinations:

ChallengeImpactMitigation Strategy
Identifying intangible assetsGoodwill overstated if intangibles not separately recognisedComprehensive due diligence, specialist valuation support
Earnout classification (consideration vs. compensation)Incorrect goodwill and post-acquisition expenseCareful contract analysis, focus on employment termination clauses
Fair value measurement complexityUnreliable financial statements, future impairmentsIndependent valuations, Level 3 sensitivity analysis
Business vs. asset acquisitionWrong accounting framework appliedApply concentration test, assess substantive processes early
Measurement period judgmentsInappropriate retrospective adjustmentsClear documentation of acquisition-date facts vs. post-acquisition events
Contingent consideration valuationEarnings volatility, stakeholder confusionSophisticated modelling, transparent disclosure, scenario analysis

Making Business Combinations Work in Practice

The complexity of accounting for business combinations under AASB 3 can't be understated. With fair value measurements, goodwill calculations, earnout classifications, and measurement period adjustments all requiring significant professional judgment, it's no wonder this remains one of the most challenging areas in financial reporting.

For Australian businesses, particularly with the new mandatory merger control regime from 1 January 2026 and continued strong M&A activity across sectors, getting business combination accounting right is more critical than ever. The difference between proper application and shortcuts can mean millions in misreported goodwill, incorrect post-acquisition expenses, and financial statements that don't faithfully represent your economic reality.

The key is treating business combination accounting like preparing for a major performance: start early, bring in specialists when needed, document everything, and don't rush the process. Whether you're the acquirer, acquiree, or an adviser helping clients navigate these waters, understanding AASB 3's requirements isn't optional—it’s essential for producing financial statements that hit all the right notes.

Ready to crank your finances up to 11? Let's chat about how we can amplify your profits and simplify your paperwork – contact us today.

What's the difference between a business combination and an asset acquisition?

A business combination involves acquiring an integrated set of inputs, processes, and outputs (or the ability to create outputs) that constitutes a business. An asset acquisition involves purchasing individual assets or a group of assets that don't meet the business definition. The distinction matters because business combinations follow AASB 3 (fair value measurement, goodwill recognition, transaction costs expensed), whilst asset acquisitions follow other standards (cost accumulation model, no goodwill, transaction costs capitalised).

How do you account for contingent consideration in business combinations?

Contingent consideration (earnouts) must be measured at fair value at acquisition date and included in the consideration transferred. If classified as a liability (cash settlement or variable shares), it is remeasured to fair value each reporting period with changes recognised in profit or loss. If classified as equity (fixed number of shares), no subsequent remeasurement occurs. The key is determining whether the contingent payment is for the business acquisition or a compensation for future services.

What happens if you acquire a business in stages?

For step acquisitions where you already held an equity interest before obtaining control, you must remeasure your previously held interest to fair value at the acquisition date. The resulting gain or loss is recognised in profit or loss (or OCI if applicable), and the fair value of your previous interest forms part of the consideration in calculating goodwill.

Can you adjust business combination accounting after the acquisition date?

Yes, adjustments can be made within the measurement period (up to 12 months after the acquisition date) for new information about facts and circumstances that existed at the acquisition date. These adjustments are applied retrospectively to impact both goodwill and comparative financial statements. Post measurement period, only corrections of errors under AASB 108 are allowed.

Do all acquisition costs get capitalised as part of the business combination?

No, acquisition-related costs such as legal fees, due diligence, valuation fees, and advisory fees are expensed as incurred under AASB 3. This differs from asset acquisitions, where directly attributable costs may be capitalised. Debt and equity issuance costs have their own treatment under AASB 132 and AASB 9 respectively.

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