Understanding Capital Expenditure vs Operating Expenses
A guide to how these two types of business expenses differ in accounting treatment and impact
L'essentiel
- This article explains the difference between Capital Expenditure (CapEx) and Operating Expenses (OpEx).
- CapEx involves large, long-term investments in assets like machinery and technology, recorded as assets on the balance sheet and depreciated over time.
- OpEx covers day-to-day recurring expenses such as rent, salaries and utilities, expensed in the same accounting period.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
This is the 100th part of a series simplifying personal finance terms, jargon and calculations for readers. The article serves as an educational resource explaining fundamental business accounting concepts that affect how companies report profits, manage cash and plan growth.
Every company's performance and growth depend on various factors, including how effectively it uses the available capital. Planned spending and cost management, be it for the short term or for a longer duration, are strategic decisions that are key to the business's success. Capital expenditure and operating expenses are two such spends that affect how a company reports profits, manages cash, and plans its growth. Not only is the accounting treatment for both these expenses different, but there are other ways too in which the two are distinct from each other.
How the two expenses differ
Capital expenditure (CapEx)
This is a significantly large expenditure that is made by the company on the acquisition and upgradation of assets that will help the company grow in the long term. This can involve investing in machinery, equipment, property, technology or research and development, which can increase productivity and lead to capacity expansion, or improve performance in the future. The increase in revenue and profits is not immediate and the expenditure does not yield instant results. Hence, it is not included in the period that the cost is incurred, is recorded as assets on the balance sheet, and depreciated over the asset's useful life.
Operating expenses (OpEx)
These are the ongoing, recurring, day-to-day expenses that are needed to run a business smoothly. High or inefficient expenses can reduce the operating profit margin. Such expenses include rent, property tax, salaries, utility bills, administrative costs or funds used for repair and maintenance of equipment. These are consumed and expensed in the same accounting period. Hence, these are recorded in the income statement and not depreciated over time. Operating expenses do not create any value or generate any revenue over the years.