Going Concern Concept in Accounting: Meaning & Examples
Going concern concept
Going concern is the quiet assumption behind almost every set of financial statements: that the business will still be trading next year. It shapes how assets are valued, how liabilities are classified, and what auditors have to flag. This guide explains the concept in plain terms, with examples, red flags, the latest IFRS and audit rules, and a clear look at what changes when going concern is in doubt.
The going concern concept assumes a business will continue operating for the foreseeable future β at least 12 months from the reporting date β without the intention or need to liquidate or materially cut back operations.
It is the default basis of accounting under both IFRS and US GAAP. Because the business is assumed to continue, assets are recorded at historical cost (not fire-sale value) and liabilities are split into current and non-current. If that assumption no longer holds, the numbers must be prepared on a very different, liquidation basis.
What is the going concern concept in accounting?
Under the going concern assumption, financial statements are prepared on the basis that the entity will continue in operation and meet its obligations as they fall due. Management makes this judgement every reporting period; if they conclude the business cannot continue, they must say so and change the basis of preparation.
- Time frame β assessed for at least 12 months from the reporting date (a minimum, not a cap).
- Operational continuity β normal business operations are expected to continue.
- Asset valuation β assets are carried at historical cost and depreciated over their useful life.
- Liability treatment β liabilities are classified as current and non-current on normal terms.
It sits alongside the other foundational assumptions you'll meet in the IFRS conceptual framework β most notably the accrual concept, with which going concern forms the two underlying assumptions of financial reporting.
Why accounting assumes going concern
The assumption isn't just convention β it decides what a number on the balance sheet actually means. Take a single asset and watch its value change depending on whether the business will continue.
It buys machinery for βΉ50 lakh with a 10-year useful life, so it depreciates about βΉ5 lakh a year and carries the asset at cost less depreciation. The value reflects use over time.
That same machine must be sold now, at whatever a buyer will pay β perhaps only βΉ18 lakh. The value collapses to what it would fetch in a forced sale.
Same machine, two completely different numbers. Going concern is what tells the accountant which one to use β and because most businesses do keep trading, it's the more useful default. That's why financial statements assume continuity unless there's clear evidence otherwise.
The two accounting paths
A simple example
Imagine a retailer that has posted losses for three straight years and has just breached a bank loan covenant. On their own, those facts cast doubt on the business continuing.
- The doubt: recurring losses plus a covenant breach are classic going concern indicators.
- Management's response: they secure a refinancing term sheet and a cost-reduction plan for the next 12 months.
- The conclusion: because a realistic plan exists, the accounts are still prepared on the going concern basis β but the material uncertainty is disclosed in the notes.
- The auditor's step: the audit report adds a "Material Uncertainty Related to Going Concern" section pointing readers to that disclosure.
Had the retailer instead decided to close down, the accounts would switch to a liquidation (break-up) basis entirely.
Going concern vs liquidation basis
The clearest way to understand going concern is to see what happens when it no longer applies.
| Aspect | Going concern basis | Liquidation (break-up) basis |
|---|---|---|
| Assumption | Business continues for at least 12 months. | Business will cease or be liquidated. |
| Asset valuation | Historical cost, depreciated over useful life. | Net realisable / liquidation value. |
| Liabilities | Normal current vs non-current split. | Mostly current; closure provisions added. |
| Depreciation | Spread over useful life. | May be accelerated. |
| Revenue | Normal recognition; long-term contracts continue. | Modified; cancellations and refunds considered. |
Why the going concern concept matters
The assumption underpins decisions well beyond the accounts department.
- Financial statement preparation β it justifies historical-cost accounting, accruals and normal liability classification.
- Investors β a going concern doubt is a red flag for long-term viability and risk.
- Lenders β banks weigh going concern in loan approvals, pricing and covenants.
- Stakeholders β suppliers, customers and employees all read going concern status as a confidence signal.
How the going concern assessment works
Every reporting period, management runs the same decision. Here is the logic, from assessment to reporting.
Going concern basis. Normal financial statements.
Going concern basis + disclose the uncertainty. Auditor adds a material-uncertainty section.
Switch to liquidation basis and disclose that fact.
Management must document the assessment β cash-flow forecasts, board minutes, correspondence with lenders and mitigation plans β and it cannot delegate the conclusion to the auditor.
Red flags and warning signs
Auditing standards list conditions that may cast significant doubt on going concern. In practice a handful show up again and again β here they are, roughly in order of how often they trigger a going concern review.
The full set of indicators, grouped into three families:
| Financial | Operational | Legal & regulatory |
|---|---|---|
| Negative operating cash flows | Loss of key customers or suppliers | Major litigation |
| Recurring losses; negative working capital | Intense competition or market decline | Regulatory investigations or sanctions |
| Loan covenant breaches | Loss of a licence, franchise or key staff | Licence revocation |
| Inability to obtain financing | Technological obsolescence | Non-compliance with statutory requirements |
A current ratio below 1.0, a high debt-to-equity ratio and negative operating cash flow together are a strong early signal. To read these numbers properly, it helps to understand current liabilities and how they're measured against short-term assets.
Does one bad year mean going concern fails?
No. A single loss-making year does not, on its own, break the going concern assumption. Going concern is about the ability to continue operating and meet obligations β not about whether the company happened to be profitable this year.
A profitable company can still face a going concern doubt (say, after a covenant breach), and a loss-making company can remain a going concern if it has funding and a realistic plan. The test is continuity, not this year's bottom line.
Two mini case studies
The same principle β continuity over profitability β explains why two struggling businesses can end up in completely different places.
Airline in a pandemic: revenue collapses to near zero and losses are huge β but government support and fresh financing keep it flying. A realistic path to continue exists, so it stays on the going concern basis.
Small retailer: cash runs out, the bank rejects a loan, and no other funding is available. With no realistic path to continue, its accounts are prepared on a liquidation basis.
The difference wasn't the size of the loss β it was whether a realistic route to keep trading existed.
The auditor's role and going concern opinions
Auditors evaluate management's assessment, test the underlying assumptions, review subsequent events and financing agreements, and judge whether disclosures are adequate. The outcome shapes the audit opinion.
These are not opposites. A company can remain a going concern and still have a material uncertainty about it. "Going concern" is the basis the accounts are prepared on; "material uncertainty" is the warning label attached when significant doubt exists but the business is still expected to continue. The accounts stay on the going concern basis β the uncertainty is disclosed in the notes and flagged by the auditor.
| Situation | Audit opinion |
|---|---|
| Going concern appropriate; no material uncertainty | Unmodified (clean) opinion |
| Going concern appropriate; material uncertainty adequately disclosed | Unmodified opinion with a "Material Uncertainty Related to Going Concern" section |
| Material uncertainty not adequately disclosed | Qualified or adverse opinion |
| Going concern basis is inappropriate | Adverse opinion |
| Insufficient evidence to conclude | Disclaimer of opinion |
Standards and regulatory framework (2026β27 update)
Going concern is governed by both accounting and auditing standards, and both sides have recently changed. Here is the current picture.
| Framework | Standard | Note |
|---|---|---|
| IFRS (current) | IAS 1, Presentation of Financial Statements | Requires management to assess going concern when preparing the accounts. |
| IFRS (from 1 Jan 2027) | IFRS 18 replaces IAS 1; the going-concern requirement moves to IAS 8 | Structure changes; the underlying principle is unchanged. |
| Global auditing | ISA 570 (Revised 2024), Going Concern | Effective for audits of periods beginning on or after 15 Dec 2026; expands the auditor's work and reporting. |
| US GAAP | ASC 205-40 | "Substantial doubt" assessment and disclosure. |
| US auditing | AU-C 570 (SAS 132) | The auditor's consideration of going concern. |
From 2027, IFRS 18 modernises presentation and moves going-concern requirements into IAS 8 (Basis of Preparation), and ISA 570 (Revised 2024) raises the bar on the auditor's evaluation and reporting β partly a response to high-profile corporate collapses. The assessment itself hasn't changed, but disclosure quality and audit scrutiny have both stepped up. To learn what "IFRS" stands for and how the standards fit together, see our IFRS full form guide.
Impact on the financial statements
When the going concern basis holds, accounting proceeds normally. When it doesn't, three areas shift.
| Area | Under going concern | Without going concern |
|---|---|---|
| Assets | Historical cost, depreciated over useful life. | Net realisable value; impairments recognised. |
| Liabilities | Normal current / non-current split. | Mostly current; closure provisions added. |
| Revenue | Standard recognition; contracts continue. | Modified; cancellations and refunds considered. |
"The Company has experienced recurring losses and negative cash flows from operations. These conditions raise substantial doubt about the Company's ability to continue as a going concern. Management's plans to address these conditions include [specific actions]. However, there can be no assurance that these plans will be successful."
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Conclusion
Going concern is the assumption that lets financial statements value a living business as a living business. It shapes asset valuation, liability classification and audit reporting β and when it's in doubt, everything changes. For students, auditors and finance professionals alike, understanding both the concept and the latest IFRS and auditing rules around it is essential to reading and preparing accounts with confidence.
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