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Forfeiture Rate

Term in Qoyod's Accounting Glossary — Practical definition with examples from the Saudi market.

What is Forfeiture Rate?

The forfeiture rate is the percentage of share-based payment awards that an entity expects to be forfeited before they vest, typically due to employees leaving. Under IFRS 2 it is built into the recognized expense so that only awards expected to vest are eventually expensed.

How It Works

  • Estimate the historical rate of departures during vesting periods.
  • Apply that rate to the total grant date fair value of outstanding awards.
  • Recognize the net expense over the vesting period.
  • True-up actual forfeitures against the estimate at each reporting date.

Saudi Context

Saudi companies offering long-term incentive plans to a high-mobility workforce often see meaningful forfeiture rates and disclose the assumption in their share-based payment note.

Example

A company grants 1,000 options expected to vest after three years and assumes a 5 percent annual forfeiture rate, so total expected vesting is roughly 1,000 x (0.95)^3 = 857 options.

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