What is capital and revenue expenditure
A Capital
expenditure is
an amount spent to acquire or improve a long-term asset such as
equipment or buildings. Usually the cost is recorded in an account classified as Property, Plant and Equipment. The cost (except for the cost of land) will then be
charged to depreciation expense over the useful life of the asset.
A Revenue
expenditure is
an amount that is expensed immediately—thereby
being matched with revenues of the current
accounting period. Routine repairs are revenue expenditures because they are
charged directly to an account such as Repairs and Maintenance Expense. Even
significant repairs that do not extend the life of the asset or do not improve
the asset (the repairs merely return the asset back to its previous condition)
are revenue expenditures.
The difference
between capital expenditures and revenue expenditures
Capital expenditures are for fixed assets, which are
expected to be productive assets for a long period of time. Revenue
expenditures are for costs that are related to specific revenue transactions or
operating periods, such as the cost of goods sold or repairs and maintenance
expense. Thus, the differences between these two types of expenditures are as
follows:
v Timing. Capital
expenditures are charged to expense gradually via depreciation, and over a long
period of time. Revenue expenditures are charged to expense in the current
period, or shortly thereafter.
v Consumption. A capital
expenditure is assumed to be consumed over the useful life of the related fixed
asset. A revenue expenditure is assumed to be consumed within a very short
period of time.
v Size. A more
questionable difference is that capital expenditures tend to involve larger
monetary amounts than revenue expenditures. This is because an expenditure is
only classified as a capital expenditure if it exceeds a certain threshold
value; if not, it is automatically designated as a revenue expenditure.
However, certain quite large expenditures can still be classified as revenue
expenditures, as long they are directly associated with sale transactions or
are period costs.
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