Key Points
- Classify as a finance lease when any one of five IFRS 16.63 indicators is met; classify as operating when none is met.
- A lessor that misclassifies a finance lease as operating overstates total assets by the full carrying amount of the underlying asset.
- The present-value-of-payments-to-fair-value ratio often sits near 90%, making borderline cases the highest-risk classification judgments.
- Use a finance lease when risks and rewards transfer; use an operating lease when the lessor retains residual value exposure.
Side-by-side comparison
In a 2022/23 review, the FRC found that 40% of lessors with mixed portfolios applied a blanket policy label (all operating, or all finance) instead of testing each contract individually. That single shortcut produced misclassified assets across entire equipment fleets. The distinction below determines whether the asset stays on or leaves the lessor's balance sheet. Getting it wrong distorts both revenue timing and asset totals.
| Dimension | Finance lease | Operating lease |
|---|---|---|
| Classification trigger | At least one of five IFRS 16.63 indicators satisfied | None of the five indicators satisfied |
| Balance sheet effect | Lessor derecognises the asset, recognises a net investment (receivable) | Lessor retains the asset, continues depreciating it under IAS 16 |
| Income pattern | Finance income front-loaded via effective interest rate method on the declining net investment | Straight-line lease income over the lease term ( IFRS 16.81 ) |
| Residual value risk | Limited to unguaranteed residual; guaranteed portion is part of the net investment | Full residual value risk stays with the lessor |
| Day-one gain or loss | Manufacturer/dealer lessors recognise selling profit at commencement ( IFRS 16.71 ) | No day-one profit; initial direct costs capitalised and spread ( IFRS 16.83 ) |
| Reassessment trigger | Only on lease modification not accounted for as a separate lease ( IFRS 16.66 ) | Same trigger: modification not accounted for as a separate lease |
Classify as a finance lease when the lease transfers substantially all risks and rewards of ownership (any one IFRS 16.63 indicator met). Classify as operating when none of the five indicators is met and the lessor retains the asset's residual risk.
When the distinction matters on an engagement
Rossi Alimentari S.p.A., an Italian food producer, leases bottling equipment to a co-packer under a seven-year contract. The equipment has a useful life of eight years, and the present value of lease payments equals 94% of fair value. Management classifies the arrangement as an operating lease because the contract title reads "equipment rental." That classification keeps a €1.6M asset on Rossi's balance sheet and recognises €280,000 of straight-line income per year.
The classification is wrong. Two IFRS 16.63 indicators are met: the lease term covers the major part of the economic life ( IFRS 16.63 (c)), and the present value of payments amounts to substantially all of the fair value ( IFRS 16.63 (d)). Correct treatment requires Rossi to derecognise the equipment and recognise a net investment of €1.6M with front-loaded finance income. ISA 540.13 (a) requires the auditor to evaluate whether management's classification method is appropriate. This is the classification error we see most often on mixed-portfolio engagements. Management labels the contract "rental agreement" and the team just rolls it forward from last year without rerunning the substance test.
Worked example: Schäfer Elektrotechnik AG
Client: German electronics company, FY2025, revenue €310M, IFRS reporter. Schäfer owns two categories of assets that it leases to customers: a customised testing rig and a pool of standard oscilloscopes.
Lease A — customised testing rig (fair value €900,000, useful life 12 years) leased to a semiconductor manufacturer for 10 years at €115,000 per year. The lease contains a bargain purchase option exercisable at €1 in year 10. No unguaranteed residual value.
Lease B — 50 standard oscilloscopes (fair value €8,000 each, total €400,000, useful life 8 years) leased to a university research lab for 3 years at €1,800 per unit per year. No purchase option. Title does not transfer.
Step 1. Classify Lease A
The bargain purchase option satisfies IFRS 16.63 (b). The lease term (10 years) covers 83% of the asset's 12-year useful life, satisfying IFRS 16.63 (c). Classification: finance lease.
Step 2. Recognise the net investment for Lease A
Solving for the rate implicit in the lease equates the present value of ten annual payments of €115,000 plus the €1 option price to the fair value of €900,000. The implicit rate is approximately 4.85%. Schäfer derecognises the testing rig (€900,000) and recognises a net investment of €900,000. Finance income for FY2025 is €900,000 x 4.85% = €43,650. After the first payment of €115,000, the closing net investment is €828,650.
Step 3. Classify Lease B
The lease term (3 years) is 38% of the 8-year useful life. The present value of payments per unit (€1,800 x 3 years, discounted at 5%) is approximately €4,901, or 61% of fair value. No purchase option and no title transfer. The oscilloscopes are standard catalogue items usable by any lab. None of the IFRS 16.63 indicators is met. Classification: operating lease.
Step 4. Apply operating lease accounting for Lease B
Schäfer retains the 50 oscilloscopes on its balance sheet (carrying amount €400,000) and depreciates them over their 8-year useful life (€50,000 per year). Lease income is 50 x €1,800 = €90,000 per year, recognised straight-line under IFRS 16.81 .
Lease A produces a net investment of €900,000 with front-loaded finance income of €43,650 in FY2025. Lease B produces straight-line lease income of €90,000 while the oscilloscopes remain on balance sheet. If Schäfer classified Lease A as operating, it would overstate PP&E by €900,000 and understate receivables by the same amount. It would also recognise level income of €115,000 per year rather than the declining finance income pattern required by IFRS 16.75 .
Why it matters in practice
Lessors apply the classification test at the contract signing date rather than the commencement date. Fair values and remaining useful lives can shift between those two dates, producing a different outcome on the IFRS 16.63 indicators. IFRS 16.61 requires classification at commencement. ISA 540.13 (b) directs the auditor to test whether the data underlying the classification reflects conditions at the correct date. Nobody enjoys ticking and bashing 200 lease contracts against the indicators one by one, but skipping it is how files get flagged.
The FRC's 2022/23 Annual Review of Corporate Reporting flagged that entities with mixed lease portfolios (some finance, some operating) often applied a single policy label across the portfolio rather than testing each lease individually against the IFRS 16.63 criteria. We've seen this on about half the equipment-lessor engagements where standardised and bespoke assets coexist under similar master lease agreements.
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Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between a finance lease and an operating lease for the lessor?
A finance lease transfers substantially all risks and rewards to the lessee, so the lessor removes the asset from its balance sheet and recognises a receivable (the net investment). An operating lease keeps the asset on the lessor's balance sheet with straight-line income recognition. IFRS 16.62 sets the classification principle, and IFRS 16.63 lists five indicators that point toward finance lease treatment.
Can a lessor reclassify an operating lease as a finance lease after inception?
Only when a lease modification occurs that is not accounted for as a separate lease. IFRS 16.66 restricts reassessment to this single trigger. Routine changes in market conditions or asset value declines do not require the lessor to revisit classification. If a modification adds a purchase option or extends the term past the major-part threshold, the lessor reruns the IFRS 16.63 indicators at the modification date.
Does IFRS 16 change lessor accounting compared to IAS 17?
No. The IASB retained the IAS 17 dual-model approach for lessors. IFRS 16.BC229 confirms that the Board decided not to revise lessor accounting because it was not considered broken. The classification criteria and the dual accounting model (net investment for finance leases, straight-line for operating leases) carry over from IAS 17 with only expanded disclosure requirements under IFRS 16.89–97.