Under IFRS 16, a lease is a contract in which the lessor provides the right to use an underlying asset to a lessee for a period of time in exchange for consideration.

A lessor must assess:

Unlike lessees, lessors continue to distinguish between finance and operating leases.

1. Finance Lease (Lessor)

A lease is classified as a finance lease if it transfers substantially all the risks and rewards incidental to ownership of the underlying asset.

a) The lessor removes the underlying asset from the balance sheet.

At lease commencement:


Dr Lease Receivable (PV of lease payments + unguaranteed residual value)
Cr Asset (carrying amount of leased asset)
Cr Gain on Sale/Finance Lease (if any)




During the lease term:

Dr Lease Receivable
Cr Interest Income


Dr Cash
Cr Lease Receivable

Recognition of Net Investment:
The lessor recognizes a receivable equal to the net investment in the lease (present value of lease payments plus any unguaranteed residual value).

Income Recognition:
Finance income is recognized over the lease term using a pattern that reflects a constant periodic rate of return on the net investment.

2. Operating Lease (Lessor)

An operating lease (as a lessor) is simply a rental arrangement. The lessor allows someone else to use the asset for a period of time, but ownership does not change. Since the risks and rewards of ownership are not transferred, the asset remains on the lessor’s balance sheet.

Because the lessor still owns the asset, it continues to depreciate just like any other asset they use in their business. The lease payments received are treated as rental income and are usually recognized evenly over the lease term. It can record in below ways.

a) When Lease Payment is Received (or Receivable)

The entry below will be created

Debit: Cash
Credit: Lease Income

Debit: Lease Receivable

Credit: Lease Income

Create a Bank/Cash Receipt document with the Transaction Type set to Other. Include the following entries in the document:

This ensures that the receipt properly records the cash collection against the previously recognized lease receivable.