Elearnmarkets - Financial Market Learning
  • Courses
  • Webinars
  • Stories
  • Language
    • English
    • Hindi
    • Bengali
No Result
View All Result
Get Free Course
  • Basic Finance
  • Derivatives
    • Futures
    • Options
  • Financial Planning
  • Fundamental Analysis
  • Technical Analysis
  • Mutual Funds
  • Marketshala
  • Miscellaneous
Elearnmarkets - Learn Stock Market, trading, investing for Free
  • Courses
  • Webinars
  • Stories
  • Language
    • English
    • Hindi
    • Bengali
No Result
View All Result
Get Free Course
Elearnmarkets - Learn Stock Market, trading, investing for Free
No Result
View All Result
Home Basic Finance
amortisation

Amortisation: What It Is & How To Calculate?

Vivek Bajaj by Vivek Bajaj
September 26, 2025
in Basic Finance
Reading Time: 8 mins read
0
213
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on XShare on WhatsApp

Key Takeaways

  • Amortisation Meaning: It is the method of spreading the cost of intangible assets like patents, licences, or software over their useful life.
  • Types: It includes book for accounts, tax as per tax rules, and loan for EMI repayments.
  • Calculation: Commonly done using the straight-line method: Capitalised cost ÷ Useful life = Annual amortisation expense.
  • Importance: Smoothens profits, keeps balance sheets accurate, supports tax planning, and helps investors understand non-cash expenses.
  • Amortisation vs Depreciation: Amortisation applies to intangible assets, while depreciation covers tangible assets like machinery or vehicles.

Imagine buying a Netflix subscription for 12 months. 

You wouldn’t count the entire payment as an expense in January and pretend February through December were free, that would be nonsense. 

Instead, you spread the cost over each month you actually watch shows. That’s basically amortisation, but for businesses: it’s spreading the cost of an intangible asset, like a patent or software license, over the years it actually helps the company make money.

Table Of Contents
  1. Key Takeaways
  2. What is Amortisation?
  3. Types of Amortisation
  4. Importance and Uses
  5. How is Amortisation Calculated?
  6. Real-world, practical examples (so this isn’t just dusty theory)
  7. Difference Between Amortisation and Depreciation
  8. Tax rules: the thing that changes your cash taxes
  9. Common Pitfalls & Checklist
  10. Conclusion
  11. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is Amortisation?

It is the accounting method for writing down the cost of intangible assets (patents, licences, customer lists, certain software, etc.) over the period those assets produce value. It follows the accounting “matching principle”: recognise expenses in the same periods that the associated revenue is generated.

(Important: a different concept, loan amortisation, deals with splitting EMIs between interest and principal. Same verb, different animal.)

Types of Amortisation

  • Book (accounting) amortisation: The expense you book in your profit & loss to match the intangible’s benefit.
  • Tax amortisation: Rules set by tax authorities that sometimes force different useful lives or start dates than your books. (book ≠ tax.)
  • Loan amortisation: How repayments chip away at a loan’s balance (not our focus here).

Importance and Uses

  • Smooths earnings: Prevents one-time purchases from wrecking a single month’s profit.
  • Balance-sheet hygiene: Reduces the carrying value of intangibles over time.
  • Tax planning: Different tax rules can accelerate or defer deductions, affecting cash taxes.
  • Investor metrics: Because it- is non-cash, some metrics (like EBITDA) exclude it, important when you want apples-to-apples comparisons.

How is Amortisation Calculated?

Most firms use the straight-line method for finite-life intangibles.

Formula (straight-line):

Annual amortisation expense = Capitalised cost ÷ Estimated useful life

What’s “capitalised cost”?

  • Purchase price for the intangible (cash, stock, other consideration)
  • Direct costs to acquire/defend it (legal fees, registration)
  • Not routine R&D or operating expenses (these are usually expensed when incurred unless specific rules allow capitalization).

Quick step-by-step example (numbers you can follow):

Company SunNext buys a patent:

  • Purchase price to inventor: ₹180,000
  • Patent registration fee: ₹20,000
  • Legal defence fees (successful defence): ₹50,000

Capitalised cost (digit-by-digit):
180,000 + 20,000 = 200,000
200,000 + 50,000 = ₹250,000

If legal/contractual life (or the useful life you estimate) = 20 years, then:

Annual amortisation = 250,000 ÷ 20 = ₹12,500 per year

Journal entry each year (typical):

  • Debit: Expense ₹12,500
  • Credit: Accumulated (or directly reduce the intangible) ₹12,500

If tax rules force a different useful life, the tax amortisation changes the deductible amount and creates temporary book-tax differences (more on that below).

(Need a spreadsheet? I can make a downloadable schedule that auto-calculates book vs tax lines.)

Real-world, practical examples (so this isn’t just dusty theory)

  1. Tata acquiring Jaguar Land Rover
    When Tata Motors acquired JLR, part of the purchase price was allocated to brand value, technology, and licences. These were amortised in the books over their useful lives.
  2. Indian IT companies
    Companies like Infosys or TCS capitalise certain software products, customer contracts, and intellectual property acquired during M&A. Their annual reports disclose amortisation of these intangibles, which directly impacts operating profit.

Why this matters for you (founder, investor, or finance person): When a company buys IP, the near-term P&L often shows an elevation. Investors and analysts watch these lines because they’re predictable non-cash expenses that still change reported earnings.

Difference Between Amortisation and Depreciation

  • Amortisation = intangibles (patents, licences).
  • Depreciation = tangibles (machines, vehicles).
  • Salvage value: Depreciation often considers a salvage value; it usually writes off the full capitalised amount.
  • Goodwill: Under U.S. GAAP and IFRS, acquired goodwill is not amortised. It’s tested for impairment instead, meaning goodwill behaves differently on the P&L.

Tax rules: the thing that changes your cash taxes

In many tax systems (notably the U.S. tax code), certain acquired intangibles known as Section 197 intangibles must be amortised over 15 years for tax deductions, even if your accounting useful life is different. That legal rule can push a tax deduction later or earlier relative to your books and create deferred tax entries. If your company is an Indian company or in another jurisdiction, local rules differ. Always check local tax guidance.

Common Pitfalls & Checklist

  • Don’t capitalise routine R&D costs (unless the tax code or accounting standards explicitly allow it).
  • Use the shorter of economic life vs legal life if uncertain.
  • Keep separate schedules for book and tax.
  • Document assumptions and keep invoices for acquisition-related costs (auditors and tax authorities will ask).
  • Remember, indefinite-life intangibles (like some goodwill) are not amortised, they’re impairment-tested.

Conclusion

This concept can be called bookkeeping with taste: it keeps your P&L honest, spreads the cost of intangible advantages over the time they actually contribute value, and crucially plays with tax rules in ways that change cash flow. Learn to capitalize correctly, pick a sensible, useful life, and keep tidy schedules. Do that, and your intangibles will sing, not scream, on the books.

Also Read: 15 Best Tax Saving Schemes in India

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is an example of amortisation?

 A company buys a software licence for ₹300,000 with a useful life of 3 years → straight-line amortisation = ₹100,000 per year. For tax, the licence may qualify as an intangible asset with a 25% depreciation rate.

Is amortisation an asset or expense?

It is an expense (appears on the income statement). The underlying intangible asset is on the balance sheet and is reduced over time by amortisation.

Is amortisation the same as paying an EMI?

No. EMI amortisation splits loan payments into interest and principal. Accounting amortisation spreads the cost of an intangible asset over its useful life. Same idea (spreading), different context.

ShareTweetSend
Previous Post

Monopoly Market: Definition, Types & Impact on Market

Next Post

Downside Tasuki Gap: Meaning, Formation & Guide

Vivek Bajaj

Vivek Bajaj

Mr Vivek Bajaj has over 20 years of experience in Multi-Asset Trading, Momentum Investor and student of Mark Minervini. He is the co-founder of StockEdge and Elearnmarkets and is passionate about data, analytics, and technology. He serves on various exchange committees and has played a significant role in the evolution of India's derivative market. He has been a speaker at various colleges and higher institutions, including IIT and IIMs.

Related Posts

Indexation in mutual funds
Basic Finance

Indexation in Mutual Funds: Meaning, Benefits & Calculation

October 28, 2025
96
Sharpe Ratio
Basic Finance

Sharpe Ratio: Meaning, Formula & Example

November 3, 2025
736
Monopoly Market
Basic Finance

Monopoly Market: Definition, Types & Impact on Market

September 19, 2025
453
Cash and Carry Arbitrage
Basic Finance

Cash and Carry Arbitrage: A Detailed Overview

September 4, 2025
406

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Disclaimer

Elearnmarkets (Kredent InfoEdge Pvt. Ltd.) is a SEBI-registered Research Analyst (RA) entity (SEBI Registration No.: INH300007493). The information provided in this article is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered as an offer to buy or sell any securities or investment products.

The stocks, securities, and investment instruments mentioned herein are not recommendations under SEBI (Research Analysts) Regulations, 2014. Readers are advised to conduct their own due diligence and seek independent financial advice before making any investment decisions.

Investments in securities markets are subject to market risks. Please read all related documents carefully before investing. Investing in Equity Shares,
Derivatives, Mutual Funds, or other instruments carry inherent risks, including potential loss of capital. Elearnmarkets (Kredent InfoEdge Pvt. Ltd.) does not provide any guarantee or assurance of returns on any investments. Past performance is not indicative of future performance.

Elearnmarkets Logo

Follow Us

Facebook-f X-twitter Instagram Linkedin-in Youtube Telegram

Register on Elearnmarkets

Continue your financial learning by creating your own account on Elearnmarkets.com

Register Free Account

Download App

Playstore logo
Download on app store

Categories

  • Basic Finance
  • Derivatives
  • Financial Planning
  • Fundamental Analysis
  • Technical Analysis
  • Mutual Funds
  • Miscellaneous

Popular On Elearnmarkets

  • Market Superheroes:
  • Vivek Bajaj
  • Chetan Panchamia
  • Ashish Kyal
  • Premal Parekh
  • Abhijit Paul
  • Jegan
  • Sivakumar Jayachadran
  • Jyoti Budhia
  • Vivek Gadodia
  • Vishal Mehta
  • Piyush Chaudhry
  • Santosh Pasi
  • Gomathi Shankar
  • Market Superheroes:
  • Vivek Bajaj
  • Chetan Panchamia
  • Ashish Kyal
  • Premal Parekh
  • Abhijit Paul
  • Jegan
  • Sivakumar Jayachadran
  • Jyoti Budhia
  • Vivek Gadodia
  • Vishal Mehta
  • Piyush Chaudhry
  • Santosh Pasi
  • Gomathi Shankar
  • Courses:​
  • Options Trading
  • Dow Theory
  • Momentum Trading
  • Stock Investing
  • Harmonic Chart Patterns
  • Algo Trading
  • Elliot Wave Theory
  • Advanced Excel
  • Cryptocurrency
  • NSE Certification Course
  • Courses:​
  • Options Trading
  • Dow Theory
  • Momentum Trading
  • Stock Investing
  • Harmonic Chart Patterns
  • Algo Trading
  • Elliot Wave Theory
  • Advanced Excel
  • Cryptocurrency
  • NSE Certification Course
  • Webinars:
  • Bank Nifty Scalping
  • Intraday Trading Strategies
  • Options Trading Strategies
  • Options selling
  • Price Action
  • Relative Strength
  • Tax Planning
  • Options Buying
  • Growth Stocks
  • Portfolio Management
  • Risk Management
  • Renko Charts
  • Crude Oil
  • Traders Psychology
  • Moving Average
  • Multibagger Stocks
  • Webinars:
  • Bank Nifty Scalping
  • Intraday Trading Strategies
  • Options Trading Strategies
  • Options selling
  • Price Action
  • Relative Strength
  • Tax Planning
  • Options Buying
  • Growth Stocks
  • Portfolio Management
  • Risk Management
  • Renko Charts
  • Crude Oil
  • Traders Psychology
  • Moving Average
  • Multibagger Stocks
  • Free Learning Modules:
  • Intraday Trading
  • Options Scalping
  • Swing Trading
  • Financial Modelling
  • RSI Indicator
  • Bollinger Bands
  • Pricing of Futures
  • Personal Finance
  • Initial Public Offerings (IPO)
  • Value Investing
  • Technical Indicators
  • Candlesticks
  • Chart Patterns
  • Option Greeks
  • ELSS Funds
  • Banking and Insurance
  • Real Estate
  • Gold
  • Free Learning Modules:
  • Intraday Trading
  • Options Scalping
  • Swing Trading
  • Financial Modelling
  • RSI Indicator
  • Bollinger Bands
  • Pricing of Futures
  • Personal Finance
  • Initial Public Offerings (IPO)
  • Value Investing
  • Technical Indicators
  • Candlesticks
  • Chart Patterns
  • Option Greeks
  • ELSS Funds
  • Banking and Insurance
  • Real Estate
  • Gold
  • Book Summaries:
  • Rich Dad Poor Dad
  • Psychology of Money
  • The Intelligent Investor
  • The Richest Man in Babylon
  • Think and Trade Like a Champion
  • Value Investing and Behavioural Finance
  • Trading in the Zone
  • Learn to Earn
  • Book Summaries:
  • Rich Dad Poor Dad
  • Psychology of Money
  • The Intelligent Investor
  • The Richest Man in Babylon
  • Think and Trade Like a Champion
  • Value Investing and Behavioural Finance
  • Trading in the Zone
  • Learn to Earn
  • Tools:
  • CAGR Calculator
  • SIP Calculator
  • eLearnOptions
  • Future Value Calculator
  • Present Value Calculator
  • Atal Pension Yojana
  • Cost of Delay Calculator
  • Become a Crorepati
  • Tools:
  • CAGR Calculator
  • SIP Calculator
  • eLearnOptions
  • Future Value Calculator
  • Present Value Calculator
  • Atal Pension Yojana
  • Cost of Delay Calculator
  • Become a Crorepati

© 2025 Elearnmarkets. All Rights Reserved

  • Visit Elearnmarkets
  • Courses
  • Webinars
  • Financial Guides
  • Get Free Counselling
  • Visit Elearnmarkets
  • Courses
  • Webinars
  • Financial Guides
  • Get Free Counselling

Download Our App

Deliver breaking news, insightful commentary, and exclusive reports. Targeting readers who rely on our platform to stay ahead.

Contact Benzinga
No Result
View All Result
  • Article Categories
    • Basic Finance
    • Derivatives
    • Financial Planning
    • Fundamental Analysis
    • Technical Analysis
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Marketshala
    • Miscellaneous
  • Language
    • Hindi
    • Bengali
    • English
  • Courses
  • Webinars
  • Stories
Get Free Course

© 2024 Elearnmarkets All Rights Reserved

Guide to Basics of Stock Investing
Learn to interpret the financial performance and health of a company.
Download Guide For FREE