Know the Difference Between a Capital and Operating Lease Before You Sign

Leases are not just paperwork. They directly impact your financials, your cash flow, and how your business is perceived by lenders and investors.

Understanding the difference between a capital vs operating lease can save you from costly mistakes.


What Is a Capital Lease

A capital lease, also called a finance lease under ASC 842, is structured so that the lessee effectively takes on the risks and rewards of ownership.

A lease is typically classified as a capital lease if it meets any of the following:

  • Ownership transfers at the end of the lease
  • There is a bargain purchase option
  • The lease term covers most of the asset’s useful life
  • The present value of payments is close to the asset’s value

Accounting Treatment

  • Balance Sheet: Asset and liability are recorded
  • Income Statement: Depreciation and interest expense are recognized
  • Cash Flow: Split between operating (interest) and financing (principal)

What Is an Operating Lease

An operating lease allows you to use an asset without owning it. It is commonly used for flexibility and shorter-term commitments.

Accounting Treatment

  • Balance Sheet: Right-of-use asset and liability recorded under ASC 842
  • Income Statement: Single lease expense recorded evenly
  • Cash Flow: Entire payment is operating cash outflow

Impact on EBITDA

Capital Lease

  • Higher EBITDA
  • Depreciation and interest are excluded from EBITDA
  • Lease cost is split into components that get added back

Operating Lease

  • Lower EBITDA
  • Entire lease expense reduces operating income
  • No add-back benefit in most cases

Impact on Cash Flow

Capital Lease

  • Higher operating cash flow
  • Principal payments shift to financing activities

Operating Lease

  • Lower operating cash flow
  • Entire lease payment sits in operating activities

Key Financial Ratio Differences

  • Debt to Equity: Higher with capital leases
  • Return on Assets: Lower due to asset recognition
  • Interest Coverage: Lower due to interest expense

Why This Matters Before You Sign

Two leases can look identical on paper but create completely different financial outcomes.

The wrong structure can:

  • Reduce your borrowing capacity
  • Distort your profitability metrics
  • Impact valuation during a sale or raise

This is not just an accounting decision. It is a strategic one.


Before You Sign That Lease, Let’s Run the Numbers

Most business owners do not realize the financial impact of a lease until it is too late.

If you are considering a lease or already locked into one, I can help you:

  • Understand the real financial impact
  • Improve EBITDA presentation
  • Protect your cash flow and lending position

👉 Book a call today and make the right decision before you sign.

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