IAS 37 · Hospitality

IAS 37 Provision Calculator
for Hospitality

Pre-configured for hospitality provision types: lease reinstatement and make-good obligations for hotel and restaurant fit-outs, restructuring provisions for permanent closures, onerous lease provisions for underperforming locations, and food safety regulatory penalties.

Obligation Type

Present Obligation

Does a present obligation exist from a past event?

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IAS 37.14 — A provision shall be recognised when: (a) an entity has a present obligation from a past event; (b) it is probable that an outflow will be required; (c) a reliable estimate can be made.

IAS 37.36 — The amount recognised shall be the best estimate of the expenditure required to settle the present obligation at the end of the reporting period.

IAS 37.39 — Where there is a large population of items, the obligation is estimated by weighting all possible outcomes by their associated probabilities (expected value).

IAS 37.45 — Where the effect of the time value of money is material, the amount of a provision shall be the present value of the expenditures expected to settle the obligation.

IAS 37.72 — A constructive obligation to restructure arises only when an entity has a detailed formal plan and has raised a valid expectation in those affected.

IAS 37 Provisions in Hospitality

Hospitality entities — hotels, restaurants, bars, and event venues — carry provision portfolios dominated by property-related obligations. Lease reinstatement provisions are near-universal for hospitality operators because the extensive fit-out modifications required for commercial kitchens, hotel rooms, restaurant interiors, and bar installations must typically be reversed at lease end. These make-good obligations can be substantial: stripping out a commercial kitchen alone can cost €50,000-€200,000, and restoring a fully fitted hotel to base-build specification can exceed €500,000. Onerous lease provisions became particularly prominent following the COVID-19 pandemic, when enforced closures left hospitality businesses with unavoidable lease obligations and no matching revenue. Restructuring provisions for permanent closures of underperforming venues require careful application of IAS 37.70-83's dual criteria — the hospitality sector's high employee count and public-facing nature mean that communication of closure plans creates constructive obligations rapidly.

Measurement Considerations for Hospitality

Lease reinstatement provisions for hospitality should be measured based on specialist contractor estimates for restoring premises to the condition required by the lease. For hospitality, this typically includes: removal of commercial kitchen equipment and ventilation, stripping out of specialist flooring, lighting, and acoustic treatments, removal of bars, reception areas, and room partitions, making good any structural modifications, and restoring original services configurations. The provision is recognised when the modifications are made (not at lease end) and discounted to present value if the remaining lease term exceeds one year. Onerous lease provisions for hospitality require careful assessment of the unavoidable costs: not just rent but also rates, insurance, maintenance, and any allocated directly related costs per the May 2020 amendment. The expected economic benefit is the sublease income achievable, if any.

Regulatory Context and Audit Considerations

Hospitality entities operate under extensive regulatory frameworks covering food safety (EU Regulation 852/2004), employment law (including specific provisions for tipped workers and seasonal staff), licensing (alcohol, entertainment), and health and safety. Each of these creates potential provision obligations when non-compliance is identified. Food safety violations can result in closure orders and fines that create both direct penalty provisions and consequential loss provisions. Auditors should verify that hospitality entities have identified all lease reinstatement obligations, particularly for properties acquired through acquisitions where the original lease terms may not have been fully assessed.

Common Provision Types in Hospitality

lease reinstatement

Hotel and restaurant fit-out restoration — strip-out of commercial kitchens, specialist equipment, interior modifications

Typical: €30K-€1M per property Timeline: Remaining lease term Method: Best Estimate
restructuring

Permanent closure of underperforming hotels, restaurants, or venues — employee redundancy and site exit costs

Typical: €100K-€5M per location Timeline: 3-18 months Method: Best Estimate
onerous contract

Onerous lease provisions for underperforming locations where lease costs exceed revenue potential

Typical: NPV of lease losses Timeline: Remaining lease term Method: Best Estimate
regulatory penalty

Food safety violations, health inspections, licensing breaches, employment law penalties

Typical: €5K-€500K Timeline: 6-24 months Method: Best Estimate
employee termination

Seasonal workforce transition to permanent closure, redundancy provisions for hotel staff

Typical: Per-employee costs × headcount Timeline: 3-12 months Method: Best Estimate

Worked Example: Continental Dining Group BV

A restaurant group is permanently closing 3 underperforming restaurants. Each location has different closure costs based on lease terms, staffing levels, and fit-out extent:

Outcome Probability Amount
Location A — city centre, 15 staff, extensive fit-out 100% €285.000
Location B — suburban, 8 staff, moderate fit-out 100% €165.000
Location C — shopping centre, 12 staff, standard fit-out 100% €210.000

Location A: Severance €95K + Lease exit €120K + Make-good €70K = €285,000. Location B: Severance €48K + Lease exit €72K + Make-good €45K = €165,000. Location C: Severance €72K + Lease exit €88K + Make-good €50K = €210,000. Total restructuring provision = €285,000 + €165,000 + €210,000 = €660,000. The provision requires a detailed formal plan approved by the board and communicated to affected staff at all three locations.

Provision Amount
€660.000
Regulatory Context: EU food safety regulations (852/2004) create compliance obligations. Employment law provisions for hospitality workers vary by jurisdiction. Licensing requirements for alcohol and entertainment create potential penalty exposure. IFRS 16 interacts with lease reinstatement provisions.

Frequently Asked Questions — Hospitality

How should hotel lease reinstatement provisions be measured?
Hotel lease reinstatement provisions should reflect the cost of returning the premises to the condition specified in the lease agreement. This typically includes removing all hotel-specific installations (room partitions, bathrooms, reception areas, commercial kitchens, air conditioning, lifts where installed by the tenant), restoring original floor plans, and making good any structural modifications. Specialist contractor estimates should be obtained. The provision is recognised when the hotel is fitted out, not at lease end, and discounted to PV for remaining lease terms exceeding one year.
When are onerous lease provisions required for hospitality locations?
An onerous lease provision is required when the unavoidable costs of meeting the lease obligation exceed the expected economic benefits from the location. For a closed or underperforming restaurant, the unavoidable costs include rent, rates, insurance, maintenance, and allocated directly related costs. The expected benefit is any achievable sublease income. The provision equals the lower of: (a) the net cost of fulfilling the remaining lease term and (b) the penalty for early termination. Break clauses should be factored into the assessment.
How does seasonal closure differ from permanent closure for hospitality provisions?
Seasonal closure — temporarily shutting a location during low season — does not create a restructuring provision because the entity intends to resume operations. The ongoing lease costs during seasonal closure are period expenses. Permanent closure creates a restructuring provision when IAS 37.70-83 criteria are met (formal plan + communication). A seasonal closure that becomes permanent creates a provision at the point the permanence decision is made and communicated, not retrospectively.
Should hospitality entities provision for food safety incidents?
Food safety incidents create provisions when they result in probable outflows: regulatory fines, compensation to affected customers, product recall costs (for food manufacturers), and legal defence costs. The provision is recognised when the incident occurs and a probable outflow is identified. For recurring minor violations, the expected value method may be appropriate using historical inspection and penalty data. For a single significant incident (e.g., food poisoning outbreak), individual assessment using the single best estimate method is more appropriate.
How do hospitality restructuring provisions handle tipped and seasonal workers?
Restructuring provisions for hospitality employees must consider the full employment cost: contractual notice periods, statutory and contractual redundancy entitlements, accrued but untaken holiday, and any enhanced termination packages offered. Tipped workers' severance should be based on their contractual pay, not including tips (unless tips form part of contractual compensation under local law). Seasonal workers on fixed-term contracts may have fewer redundancy entitlements, but any costs associated with early termination of their contracts should be included.