Business assets

Intangible assets

Guidance

Intangible assets are valuable resources that belong to your business but, unlike tangible assets, they are not in a physical form. Examples include goodwill, intellectual property and customer relationships.

What are intangible assets?

These assets lack physical form - you cannot touch or see them. They are typically long-term and provide economic benefits through intellectual or legal rights, or business advantages. Common examples include:

  • your reputation
  • brand
  • skills and knowledge
  • trade secrets
  • secret formulas or processes
  • research findings
  • intellectual property (patents, designs, copyright and trade marks)
  • employee, customer and supplier relationships
  • goodwill
  • contracts
  • franchise rights
  • licence rights
  • domain names
  • technology - ie proprietary software, processes, databases
  • skilled and competent workforce

You can create intangible assets through:

  • contracts - such as service agreements, lease agreements, use rights, etc
  • technology - including patents, software, secret recipes, etc
  • customers - eg customer lists and databases, open orders, production backlogs, etc
  • marketing - for example trade marks, domain names, brand perception, etc

Intangible asset valuation

Because they lack physical properties, intangible assets are often difficult to track and measure. However, they can add significant commercial value and competitive advantage to your business.

For valuation and accounting purposes, you should only list intangible assets on your company's balance sheet if:

  • you have acquired them for a price
  • they have an identifiable value
  • they have a finite lifespan

In this case, they should appear on your company's balance sheet as long-term assets valued according to their purchase price and - if applicable - amortisation or depreciation schedule. See more on depreciation of assets.

Assets that you have developed internally (such as self-built software) often don't have reportable costs and, as such, you should not list them on your company's balance sheet. Find out more about business asset valuation.

Managing intangible assets

Although some intangible assets may not appear on the balance sheet, it is worth taking stock of all your resources and finding an effective way of managing them. See more on managing assets in business.

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