ASU 2023-05 Joint Venture Formations: Fair Value Accounting Guide
Joint ventures (JVs) have long been the structure of choice for businesses pooling resources, technology, or geographic reach — but the accounting at formation had been a diversity-in-practice problem for decades. The FASB’s ASU 2023-05 joint venture formations guidance fixes that, requiring fair value measurement of contributed net assets at formation. This guide walks through what changed, how the fair value approach works, the scope exceptions, and the practical implementation steps for JVs forming in 2025 and beyond.
At SW Accounting & Consulting Corp, we work with venturers and the JVs they form — strategic alliances, real estate ventures, biotech research collaborations, and cross-border joint ventures. Below: the new rules, the carrying-value-vs-fair-value debate, and what every JV preparer needs to do at formation.
What was the diversity in practice before ASU 2023-05? 🤔
Before ASU 2023-05, US GAAP had no authoritative guidance on accounting by a joint venture for noncash assets contributed at formation — leaving JVs to choose between carrying values or fair values of contributed assets, with no clear acquirer identification.
The problem:
- Topic 805 (Business Combinations) requires identifying an acquirer that records its assets at carrying value while the acquiree gets fair value treatment.
- A JV formed by two roughly-equal venturers had no clear acquirer — so the “acquiree” gets no fair value step-up either.
- JVs could record contributed assets at carrying value OR fair value at formation, with no consistent rule.
- This created comparability problems between JVs and complications when calculating return on equity, return on assets, and other metrics.
During deliberations, the FASB considered two approaches:
| Approach | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Carrying value | Maintains historical trends, less costly to prepare | JV operations include venturer-embedded gains/losses; basis difference |
| Fair value (selected) | Decision-useful for investors; ROE/ROA reflect economic reality | Requires valuation work at formation |
The FASB chose fair value — relevance over preparation cost.
How does ASU 2023-05 work at formation? 🏗
At formation date, the JV records contributed net assets at fair value — the price market participants would pay in an orderly transaction (per ASC Topic 820, Fair Value Measurement).
Key mechanics:
- New basis of accounting on the formation date — assets and liabilities revalued to fair value.
- ASC Topic 820 fair value framework applies — Level 1/2/3 hierarchy, market participant assumptions, principal market analysis.
- Valuation specialists often needed — particularly for noncash contributions, intellectual property, real estate, or operating businesses transferred to the JV.
- Codified in Subtopic 805-60 — Recognition and Initial Measurement of Joint Venture Formations.
The fair value snapshot is taken at the FORMATION DATE — the moment the JV becomes an accounting entity. Pre-formation negotiations and valuations are not the measurement date. We see clients confuse “deal valuation” (often months before close) with “formation date fair value” (the legally-recognized JV entity creation date). Document the formation date precisely and gather independent valuations as of THAT date.
When does ASU 2023-05 take effect? 📅
Prospectively for joint ventures formed on or after January 1, 2025. JVs formed before January 1, 2025 may adopt retrospectively, and early adoption is permitted for any interim or annual period.
| JV Formation Date | Treatment |
|---|---|
| On or after January 1, 2025 | REQUIRED — fair value at formation (prospective) |
| Before January 1, 2025 (elected to restate) | May apply retrospectively — recompute opening JV balance sheet at fair value as of formation |
| Before January 1, 2025 (no election) | Continue under prior accounting |
| Any interim/annual period (early adoption) | Permitted |
What’s the scope of ASU 2023-05? ⚖
ASU 2023-05 applies to the formation of entities that qualify as joint ventures — generally entities owned and operated by a small group of venturers as a separate business or project for mutual benefit. Certain scope exceptions exist.
In scope:
- Newly-formed entities meeting the FASB Master Glossary definition of a joint venture.
- Most operating-business JVs, real estate JVs, technology JVs.
- Partnership, corporation, LLC, or trust structures (forms typically supporting JV operations).
Out of scope (scope exceptions in ASU 2023-05):
- Entities under common control transactions.
- Collaborative arrangements that don’t form a separate legal entity.
- Certain not-for-profit entity combinations under ASC 958.
What does the fair value calculation look like? 🧮
The JV applies ASC Topic 820’s fair value framework to each contributed asset and liability — Level 1 quoted prices first, Level 2 observable inputs, Level 3 unobservable inputs.
Practical considerations:
- Cash and marketable securities — Level 1, straightforward.
- Real estate — Level 2/3 typically, with appraisals.
- Intangibles (patents, trademarks, customer relationships) — Level 3 valuation, often income-approach or cost-approach.
- Operating business contributions — Topic 820 + ASC 820-10-35-24A guidance on principal vs. most advantageous market.
- Goodwill — recognized at formation if total fair value of contributions exceeds identifiable net asset fair values.
- Contingent consideration — measured at fair value with subsequent remeasurement following acquisition-method guidance.
Fair value step-up at JV formation creates an immediate book-tax difference. Venturers’ tax basis in contributed assets typically carries over to the JV (Section 721 nonrecognition), while book basis steps up to fair value. The resulting deferred tax liabilities under ASC 740 should be recognized at formation. Coordinate with both tax and audit teams to avoid surprises.
What should JV preparers and venturers do now? ✅
- Identify pipeline JVs. Inventory all JV formations expected in the next 12 months. Determine whether they fall under ASU 2023-05 (formation date 1/1/2025+) or pre-existing.
- Engage valuation specialists early. Fair value measurement of operating business contributions and intangibles takes time. Start the valuation engagement during deal negotiation, not after close.
- Document the formation date precisely. Legal formation date drives the fair value measurement date. Confirm with counsel.
- Coordinate deferred tax accounting. Section 721 nonrecognition keeps tax basis at carryover; book basis steps up to fair value. ASC 740 deferred tax liability at formation.
- Evaluate retrospective adoption for pre-2025 JVs. If a recently-formed JV would benefit from fair value (e.g., for investor reporting consistency or ROE/ROA presentation), retrospective adoption is permitted.
- Update JV governance documents. JV operating agreements, financial reporting schedules, and audit requirements should reference the new accounting framework.
Frequently Asked Questions 🗂
For the official ASU text and FASB technical reference, see ASU 2023-05 on FASB.org and ASC Subtopic 805-60. Fair value framework guidance is at ASC Topic 820. Tax considerations interact with IRC Section 721 and ASC 740.
Need help with JV formation accounting, fair value valuation engagement, ASC 740 deferred tax integration, or retrospective adoption decisions? SW Accounting & Consulting Corp’s technical accounting team supports venturers and JV preparers — book a consultation.







