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You’re asking a very precise accounting question, so let’s cut straight to the authoritative answer:
📘 US GAAP and IFRS do not prescribe a specific useful life for “technology used for financial‑reporting compliance.”
Neither framework provides a table or mandated number of years for this type of asset.
Instead, both require management to estimate the useful life based on expected economic benefit, obsolescence, and regulatory factors.
Below is the clean, authoritative breakdown.
🧩 1. Under US GAAP
Relevant Standards
Key Principle
Useful life must reflect:
Common practice (not mandated)
For financial‑reporting or compliance technology:
But these are industry norms, not GAAP rules.
🧩 2. Under IFRS
Relevant Standard
Key Principle
Useful life is:
IAS 38 requires considering:
Common practice
Similar to US GAAP:
🧭 3. What This Means for “Technology for Financial‑Reporting Compliance”
This category includes:
These are typically intangible assets (unless hardware is involved).
Useful life is determined by:
🎯 4. The Practical Answer
US GAAP:
No prescribed useful life. Management estimates it.
Common range: 3–7 years.
IFRS:
No prescribed useful life. Management estimates it.
Common range: 3–7 years.
Why no fixed number?
Because regulatory technology varies widely by:
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