How to Translate Financial Statements for IFRS and Local GAAP
By Team Stepes · Updated Oct 2025 · 8 min read
Learn how to translate financial statements that comply with both IFRS and local GAAP while keeping accounting context, terminology, and numbers intact across languages.
Why Financial Statement Translation Is Complex
Financial statements sit at the center of investor communication and regulatory oversight. A small shift in wording can alter the meaning of a disclosure or disrupt an audit trail. Translating balance sheets, income statements, and cash flows requires precise terminology and consistent formatting.
Complexity rises when a company files in multiple jurisdictions. Reports must read naturally in the target language and still map to the underlying accounting treatment.
IFRS vs. Local GAAP
IFRS promotes a common financial language worldwide, whereas local GAAP frameworks vary by market. Terms such as inventory valuation, deferred tax, or impairment have different nuances. Translators need accounting awareness to select the correct terms.
Steps to Translate Accurately
- Prepare clean source files and consistent labels.
- Use a bilingual accounting glossary for recurring terms.
- Assign translators with finance backgrounds.
- Run a second-linguist and accountant review.
How Stepes Supports IFRS and GAAP
Stepes delivers financial translations in more than 100 languages under ISO 17100 and ISO 9001:2015. Our technology flags numeric mismatches and inconsistent financial terms.
Get Accurate IFRS and GAAP Translations
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