IAS 38 (Intangible Assets)
Definition
The International Accounting Standard governing the recognition, measurement, and disclosure of intangible assets. IAS 38 requires that an intangible asset be identifiable, controlled by the entity, and expected to generate future economic benefits. Notably, internally generated brands, customer lists, and similar items cannot be capitalised under this standard.
Complementary Terms
Concepts that frequently appear alongside IAS 38 (Intangible Assets) in practice.
The section of the UK and Republic of Ireland financial reporting standard that governs the recognition, measurement, and disclosure of intangible assets other than goodwill for entities not applying IFRS. Section 18 requires intangible assets to be measured at cost less accumulated amortisation and impairment losses, with all intangible assets presumed to have a finite useful life.
The period over which an intangible asset is expected to contribute to future cash flows, determining the duration of amortisation. Useful life may be finite (e.g., a patent term) or indefinite (e.g., a perpetually renewed trademark), and its estimation requires careful analysis of technological, legal, and competitive factors.
The IFRS standard that establishes procedures to ensure assets are carried at no more than their recoverable amount — the higher of fair value less costs of disposal and value in use. IAS 36 requires impairment testing whenever there is an indication of impairment, and at least annually for goodwill and intangible assets with indefinite useful lives.
An intangible asset that arises when a company is acquired for more than the fair value of its net identifiable assets. Goodwill reflects factors such as brand value, customer loyalty, workforce expertise, and synergies that are expected to generate future economic benefits.
Intangible assets that are not captured on a company's balance sheet or in traditional accounting frameworks, including internally generated brands, proprietary data, organisational culture, and employee expertise. These often represent the largest source of hidden value in modern businesses.
The US GAAP standard governing the recognition, measurement, and impairment of long-lived tangible and certain intangible assets. ASC 360 requires a two-step impairment test: first, a recoverability test comparing undiscounted future cash flows to carrying value; second, if impairment is indicated, measurement of the loss as the excess of carrying value over fair value.
The accounting practice of recording an intangible expenditure as an asset on the balance sheet rather than expensing it immediately through the income statement. Under IAS 38, development costs may be capitalised when specific recognition criteria are met, whereas research costs must always be expensed.
The process of determining the period over which an intangible asset is expected to contribute to the cash flows of an entity, which governs the amortisation period under IAS 38 and ASC 350. Useful life may be finite (based on contractual, legal, regulatory, technological, or economic factors) or indefinite (when there is no foreseeable limit to the period over which the asset will generate net cash inflows).
Put this knowledge to work
Use Opagio's free tools to measure and grow the intangible assets that drive your business value.