IFRS 16 - Definition of a lease (2024)

Does the customer have the right to...

...obtain substantially all of the economic benefits from the use of the identified asset throughout the period of use?

The second evaluation involves determining whether a customer has the right to obtain substantially all of the economic benefits from use of the identified asset throughout the period of use. There are many ways that a customer can obtain those economic benefits such as by using, holding or sub-leasing the asset.

When making this evaluation, a customer considers its rights within the defined scope of the contract. For example, if a contract specifies that a customer can only print up to a specified number of pages during the period of use of a printer, the customer considers only the economic benefits arising from use of the printer for those pages, and not beyond.

Variable lease payments based on the customer’s use of the asset (eg variable payments based on sales) do not prevent a customer from obtaining substantially all of the economic benefits from the use of the asset. Although the customer passes on some of the benefits to the supplier through variable payments, the customer is still the party that receives the economic benefits arising from use of the asset (in this case, the cash flows arising from the sales).

IFRS 16 is explicit on this point to eliminate the possibility that companies might include variable lease payments solely to avoid the arrangement being classified as a lease and therefore lease accounting.


...direct the use of the identified asset throughout the period of use?

In evaluating whether the customer has the right to direct the use of an identified asset, a customer must have the right to direct ‘how and for what purpose’ the asset is used throughout the period of use. In making this evaluation, a customer considers the decisions that most directly impact the economic benefits to be derived from the use of the asset, including:

  • rights to decide the type of output to be produced by the asset(s)
  • rights to decide when the output is produced
  • rights to decide where the output is produced
  • rights to decide whether the output is produced and the quantity thereof.

In many cases, contracts will include terms and conditions that protect the supplier’s interest in the asset, protect its personnel and/or ensure the supplier complies with laws and regulations. These rights are considered to be protective and do not, in isolation, prevent the customer from having the right to direct the use of the asset within the scope of the contract.

Examples of protective rights noted in IFRS 16 include:

  • specifying the maximum amount of use of an asset (eg an aircraft lease with a maximum usage allowed of 15,000 engine hours per year)#
  • limiting where or when the customer can use the asset (eg an automotive lease specifying that the identified vehicle can only be driven in France)
  • requiring the customer to follow certain operating practices (eg a lease of retail space where opening hours are limited to specific times of the day)
  • requiring the customer to notify the supplier if the customer changes how the asset will be used (eg a warehouse lease where the customer must notify the supplier if they plan to change the use of the space from storing inventory to a retail area).

Lastly, IFRS 16 is clear that rights to operate or maintain an asset do not give a customer the right to direct how and for what purpose the asset is used, except for when the ‘how and for what purpose’ decisions are predetermined. In this case, the customer will control the asset if the customer has the right to operate the asset throughout the period of use or the customer designed the asset in a way that predetermines how and for what purpose the asset will be used throughout the period of use.

IFRS 16 - Definition of a lease (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Duane Harber

Last Updated:

Views: 6286

Rating: 4 / 5 (51 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Duane Harber

Birthday: 1999-10-17

Address: Apt. 404 9899 Magnolia Roads, Port Royceville, ID 78186

Phone: +186911129794335

Job: Human Hospitality Planner

Hobby: Listening to music, Orienteering, Knapping, Dance, Mountain biking, Fishing, Pottery

Introduction: My name is Duane Harber, I am a modern, clever, handsome, fair, agreeable, inexpensive, beautiful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.