Tax

Unrecognized Tax Benefits Reevaluation (Statute Lapse)

Bank of New York Mellon Unrecognized Tax Benefits Reevaluation (Statute Lapse) remained flat by 0.0% to $3.25M in Q4 2025 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric grew by 62.5%, from $2.00M to $3.25M. This is a positive signal — higher values indicate stronger performance for this metric.

Analysis

StatementIncome Statement
SectionTax
CategoryRisk
SignalHigher is better
VolatilityModerate
First reportedQ1 2014
Last reportedQ4 2025

How to read this metric

A higher value indicates that older, unresolved tax positions are expiring, potentially reducing future tax risk.

Detailed definition

The reduction in the liability for unrecognized tax benefits due to the expiration of the statute of limitations in vari...

Peer comparison

Commonly reported by multinational corporations as a component of tax reserve reconciliations.

Metric ID: is_isrg_unrecognized_tax_benefits_statute_lapse

Historical Data

5 years
 FY'21FY'22FY'23FY'24FY'25
Value$0.00$13.00M$0.00$8.00M$13.00M
YoY Change-100.0%+62.5%
Range$0.00$13.00M
Avg YoY Growth-18.8%
Median YoY Growth-18.8%

Unrecognized Tax Benefits Reevaluation (Statute Lapse) at Other Companies

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Bank of New York Mellon's unrecognized tax benefits reevaluation (statute lapse)?
Bank of New York Mellon (BK) reported unrecognized tax benefits reevaluation (statute lapse) of $3.25M in Q4 2025.
How has Bank of New York Mellon's unrecognized tax benefits reevaluation (statute lapse) changed year-over-year?
Bank of New York Mellon's unrecognized tax benefits reevaluation (statute lapse) increased by 62.5% year-over-year, from $2.00M to $3.25M.
What does unrecognized tax benefits reevaluation (statute lapse) mean?
The decrease in tax reserves because the time limit for tax authorities to audit those specific tax positions has expired.