Intraperiod tax allocation definition

What is an Intraperiod Tax Allocation?

An intraperiod tax allocation is the allocation of income taxes to different parts of the results appearing in the income statement of a business, so that some line items are stated net of tax. This situation arises in the following cases:

The intraperiod tax allocation concept is used to reveal the "true" results of certain transactions net of all effects, rather than disaggregating them from income taxes. The reason for using intraperiod tax allocations is to improve the quality of information presented to the readers of a company’s financial statements.

Note that, though the income tax included in these net calculations is usually an expense, it may also be a credit, so that any of the preceding items presented net of tax would include the tax credit.

Most elements of the income statement are not presented net of the intraperiod tax allocation. For example, revenues, the cost of goods sold, and administrative expenses are not presented net of income taxes. These line items are all part of continuing operations, so there is no point in presenting each one net of tax - only the results of all continuing operations are presented net of tax.

Example of an Intraperiod Tax Allocation

For example, ABC International records a gain of $1 million. Its tax rate is 20%, so it reports the gain net of taxes, at $800,000. This presentation provides more information about the net gain experienced by the company, which is more precisely-targeted information that may be of use to the readers of its financial statements.

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