Lease contracts play an important role in the day-to-day of most organizations. But does your business thoroughly understand each party’s responsibilities? What about the benefits? These answers are critical to maintaining accurate and healthy lease accounting.
A lessee is an individual or entity that rents or leases property, equipment, or other assets from another party, known as the lessor. In a lease agreement, the lessee is granted the right to use the leased asset for a specified period of time in exchange for regular payments, typically referred to as rent or lease payments.
A lessor is an individual or entity that owns an asset and leases or rents it out to another party, known as the lessee, in exchange for regular payments, usually called rent or lease payments.
Under a contractual lease obligation — be it commercial real estate, equipment or vehicles — there is always a lessor and a lessee. A lease is generally defined as a contractual arrangement in which one party, the lessor, provides an asset for use by the other party, the lessee. This arrangement is based on periodic payments for an agreed amount of time.
Lease contracts offer distinct advantages for both lessors and lessees, contributing to their respective financial strategies and operational efficiencies.
Although different types of leases exist — such as finance and operating leases — the obligations have one thing in common. When it comes to lease accounting, leases must be reported accurately to meet regulatory compliance standards.
Accurate accounting is vital to the health of any organization. As a lessor, accounting accuracy requires correctly classifying your leases—whether as sales-type, direct financing or operating.
Under lease accounting standard ASC 842, ownership transfers to the lessee for accounting purposes for sales-type and direct financing leases. Sales-type leases require lessors to derecognize the underlying asset and instead recognize the lease’s net investment, selling profit or loss arising from the lease, and track the balance and interest income over time. Lessors record direct financing leases in a similar manner but defer the asset’s profit or loss.
Operating leases give the lessee the right to use the asset but not ownership of it. Therefore, lessors record the asset, its related depreciation and lease payments in the books.
Lessees must classify their leases as either finance or operating under the ASC 842 lease accounting standard. Both types of leases must appear in the organization’s balance sheet unless the term is 12 months or less, which is considered a short-term lease. For operating leases, lessees are expected to record payments as operating costs on the organization’s income statement.
How lease agreements are presented on balance sheets has changed for both lessors and lessees under ASC 842. Lessees now need to list all leasing obligations, including operating leases, on the balance sheet, categorizing them as either operating or finance leases. Lessors, who were already classifying leases, are less affected. Accurate classification and accounting are essential, and lease management software can assist in meeting these new requirements.
Whether you are a lessor or a lessee, using a robust software solution like Visual Lease can help maintain accurate lease accounting — and protect the financial health of your business.
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