Average Profit Method for Goodwill Valuation

Average Profits Method - Learn Accounting
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Average Profits Method

Learn how to calculate goodwill using average profits - made simple for students!

Two Types (a) Simple Average Profits Method b) Weighted Average Profits Method

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What is Simple Average Profits Method?

The Average Profits Method is used to calculate the goodwill of a business. Goodwill represents the future earning potential of a business based on its past performance.

Simple Formula:
Simple Average Profit = Total Profits / Number of Years for which profits taken
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Let's Start with a Simple Example

Imagine a business has the following profits for 3 years:

Year Profit (₹)
2022 ₹1,00,000
2023 ₹2,00,000
2024 ₹30,000
Total ₹3,30,000
Calculation:
Average Profit = ₹3,30,000 ÷ 3 = ₹1,10,000 per year

This means the business can potentially earn ₹1,10,000 every year in the future!

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Understanding Goodwill

When you buy a business, you're essentially buying its future profits in the form of Goodwill.

So we multiply average profits per year (calculated earlier) with the number of years, for which we are purchasing the profits

This is called "Number of Years Purchase".

The number of years purchase is usuallygiven in question.

If Number of Years Purchase = 3

Goodwill = ₹1,10,000 × 3 = ₹3,30,000

Different Ways to Express number of years purchase

  • 2 years = 2 times = 200%
  • 3 years = 3 times = 300%
  • 4 years = 4 times = 400%
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Understanding Financial Years

For Goodwill calculation, we find average profits for previous 3 to 5 financial years

Questions can present financial years in different formats. Here's how they're written:

Method 1 Method 2 Method 3 Method 4
01-Apr-2024 to 31-Mar-2025 Year ending 31-Mar-2025 2024-2025 2024-25
01-Apr-2023 to 31-Mar-2024 Year ending 31-Mar-2024 2023-2024 2023-24

All these formats mean the same thing - just different ways of writing financial years!

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Calculating normal adjusted business profits

Let's Learn this with an example of a student. Imagine you're in Class XI and missed final exams due to fever. Your teacher will give marks based on average of marks in previous classes:

Marks in previous classes were

Class % Marks Note
IX 70 10% less due to accident in final exams
X 80 Normal performance
XI 82 Good performance
1
Simple Average: (70 + 80 + 82) ÷ 3 = 77.33%
2
After Adjustment: Class IX should be 80 (70 + 10% increase)
Adjusted Average: (80 + 80 + 82) ÷ 3 = 80.67%

Why adjust? The accident in Class IX was abnormal - it doesn't reflect your true potential!

Why adjust? We are calculating future marks based on past marks. Past Marks just gives an idea.

Why adjust? We have to adjust for new events in future or remove impact of past events not likely to happen in future

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Adjustments in Business Profits

Just like the student example, we need to adjust business profits for abnormal items:

Average profits is calculated only after making the below adjustment to past years profits

Each point explained in a separate article

🔻 DEDUCT (Less)

  • Abnormal income or gains( Example - insurance claims)
  • Profit on sale of fixed assets
  • Non-business income
  • Partner salary or remuneration/Management Cost
  • Overvaluation of closing stock
  • Undervaluation of opening stock
  • Income in past but not expected to arise in future (Non recurring income)
  • Expenses not in past, but likely to arise in future

🔺 ADD (More)

  • Abnormal losses (fire, theft, accident)
  • Loss on sale of fixed assets
  • Undervaluation of closing stock
  • Overvaluation of Opening Stock
  • Expenses in past but not expected to arise in future (non recurring expenses)
  • Income not in past but likely to arise in future
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Weighted Average Profits Method

Simple average method treats all years equally

But recent years are more important for predicting future!

Example for Weighted Average profit method

For explanation and steps see next slide

Year Profit (₹) Adjustment (₹) Adjusted Profit (₹) Weight Weighted Value
2022 80,000 +20,000 1,00,000 1 1,00,000
2023 1,45,000 -25,000 1,20,000 2 2,40,000
2024 1,60,000 -15,000 1,45,000 3 4,35,000
2025 2,00,000 0 2,00,000 4 8,00,000
Total 10 15,75,000
Weighted Average = 15,75,000 ÷ 10 = ₹1,57,500
If Years Purchase = 2, then Goodwill = ₹1,57,500 × 2 = ₹3,15,000
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Step-by-Step Process for Weighted Average

1
Make adjustments to past years' profits as explained in simple average method
2
Assign weights (oldest year = least weight, recent year = highest weight), Usually 1,2,3,4, etc.
3
Multiply each year's adjusted profit with its weight
4
Find sum of all weighted values
5
Find sum of all weights
6
Calculate: Weighted Average = Sum of weighted values ÷ Sum of weights
7
Multiply weighted average by number of years purchase to get Goodwill
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When to Use Which Method?

Simple Average Method

  • When question asks for it
  • When question is silent about which method to use
  • When profits show no clear trend

Weighted Average Method

  • When question specifically asks
  • When profits show clear upward trend (Profits increasing every year)
  • When profits show clear downward trend (Profits decreasing every year)
Year Uptrend Example Downtrend Example No Trend Example
2021 ₹1,00,000 ₹5,00,000 ₹5,00,000
2022 ₹1,25,000 ₹4,00,000 ₹6,00,000
2023 ₹1,35,000 ₹3,50,000 ₹4,00,000
2024 ₹1,40,000 ₹2,50,000 ₹20,000
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Key Takeaways

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Goodwill = Future earning potential of business
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Always adjust for abnormal items before calculating average
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Weighted average gives more importance to recent years
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Number of years purchase can be expressed as years, times, or percentages
Remember the Final Formula:
Goodwill = Average Profit × Number of Years Purchase

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