How to account for leasehold improvements

What are Leasehold Improvements?

Leasehold improvements are defined as the enhancements paid for by a tenant to leased space. Leasehold improvements generally revert to the ownership of the landlord upon termination of the lease, unless the tenant can remove them without damaging the leased property. These improvements are extremely common, except for cases in which a landlord agrees to fund the improvements.

Examples of Leasehold Improvements

Examples of leasehold improvements are interior walls and ceilings, electrical and plumbing additions, built-in cabinetry, and carpeting and tiles.

Accounting for Leasehold Improvements

When you pay for leasehold improvements, capitalize them if they exceed the corporate capitalization limit. If not, charge them to expense in the period incurred. If you capitalize these expenditures, then amortize them over the shorter of their useful life or the remaining term of the lease. The remaining term of the lease for amortization purposes can be extended into additional lease renewal periods if the renewal is reasonably assured (such as when there is a bargain renewal option).

If you subsequently purchase the building, the lease is presumably dissolved, so you can then amortize over the estimated remaining useful life of the building, which is likely to be a much longer period than the term of the original lease, resulting in a significantly smaller monthly charge.

Technically, you are amortizing leasehold improvements rather than depreciating them. The reason is that the landlord owns the improvements, so you are only exercising an intangible right to use the improvements during the term of the lease - and intangible assets are amortized, not depreciated.

Related AccountingTools Courses

Accounting for Leases

Fixed Asset Accounting

Example of the Accounting for Leasehold Improvements

ABC Company has a five-year lease on an office building, as well as an option to renew the lease for an additional five years at the then-prevailing market rate. ABC pays $150,000 to build offices in the building immediately after it leases the space. The useful life of these offices is 20 years. Since there is no bargain purchase option to renew the lease, it is not reasonably assured that ABC will renew the lease. Consequently, it should amortize the $150,000 over the five years of the existing lease, which is the shorter of the useful life of the improvements or the lease term. ABC will recognize $30,000 of amortization in each of the five years of the lease with the following entry:

  Debit Credit
 Amortization expense 30,000
 
      Accumulated amortization   30,000