What Are Intangible Assets?
Small businesses own two types of assets. The first type of asset is tangible assets. Tangible assets are items you can touch, such as equipment, inventory, and a company car. Intangible assets are items that have no physical form, and businesses usually expect them to provide benefits for at least one year. They have value because they will provide businesses with revenue during future time periods. Intangible assets provide a business the right of use. Some examples are goodwill, patents, copyrights, and a customer base.
How Intangibles Are Classified
Intangible assets have either a definite or indefinite useful life. An intangible asset has a definite useful life if there are legal, technological, contractual, or regulatory factors that limit its useful life. An example might be proprietary software a business bought from another business. Its life would be limited because technology would advance over time to improve the software. The asset’s value would decline, or deteriorate, over time. Another example might be a contract or franchise agreement that eventually expires. If an intangible asset has economic value to your business over time, without deterioration, then that intangible has an indefinite life. Intangible assets with an indefinite life should not be amortized. Section 197 of the IRS tax code lists and defines the following assets as intangibles with an indefinite life, assuming you created the assets as a substantial part of buying the business. Even though the assets listed above have an indefinite life, you must amortize them over 180 months or 15 years and, in general, use the straight-line depreciation technique. IRS Publication 535 has the details about classifying assets for amortization.
Amortization vs. Depreciation
Accounting for tangible and intangible assets is different from accounting for normal business operating expenses. This is because tangible and intangible assets are assumed to have useful lives of more than one year. For your tangible assets, you use the process of depreciation to gradually write off their expenses over a period of time. Depreciation is the reduction in value of a physical asset with the passage of time due primarily to wear and tear. Depreciation can also be defined as the recovery of the cost of property you own over several years. You’ll use amortization instead of depreciation for intangible assets. Amortization is the process of reducing certain intangible assets in value over time due to a deterioration in their value. Both use the accounting method of straight-line depreciation, for tax purposes, to accomplish their goal.
Determining the Life of Intangible Assets
It is more difficult to determine the useful life of an intangible asset than a tangible asset. For intangible assets with an indefinite life that were acquired rather than created by your business, the amortization period should be 15 years, per the IRS. If the intangible assets have a definite life, then you have to determine their useful life for tax purposes. Consider these factors:
The asset’s expected useThe expected useful life of another asset or a group of assets to which the useful life of the intangible asset may relateAny legal, regulatory, or contractual provisions that may limit useful lifeAny legal, regulatory, or contractual provisions that enable renewal or extension of the asset’s legal or contractual life without substantial costThe effects of obsolescence, demand, competition, and other economic factorsThe level of maintenance expenditure required to obtain the expected future cash flows from the asset
How To Calculate Amortization
The main method of calculating amortization for an intangible asset is the straight-line method. It would be confusing for a company to try to write off the cost of an intangible asset with a definite life in any other way. Let’s look at an example of the amortization of an intangible asset. A small children’s clothing shop, Kidz Klothes, purchased their business from a shop that was going out of business. Along with the shop came a permit, which was valued at $15,000 when the new business was making the purchase. The new owners have determined that the permit is only valuable for three years after they begin to use it. The permit has no residual value. Here is the amortization table for the permit’s value:
How To Claim Amortization for Taxes
You’ll report yearly amortization deductions to the IRS in Part VI of Form 4562. Amortization instructions to file business taxes are in Publication 535.