
Intangible Asset & Example
An intangible asset is an asset that is not physical in nature. While an intangible asset doesn't have the obvious physical value of a factory or equipment, it can prove valuable for a firm and be critical to its long-term success or failure. For example, a business such as Coca-Cola wouldn't be nearly as successful if it not for the money made through brand recognition. Although brand recognition is not a physical asset that can be seen or touched, it can have a meaningful impact on generating sales. If Company ABC purchases a patent from Company XYZ for an agreed-upon amount of $1 billion, then Company ABC would record a transaction for $1 billion in intangible assets that would appear under long-term assets. 1:45 An intangible asset is an asset that is not physical in nature, such as a patent, brand, trademark, or copyright. However, intangible assets created by a company do not appear on the balance sheet and have no recorded book value.

What Is an Intangible Asset?
An intangible asset is an asset that is not physical in nature. Goodwill, brand recognition and intellectual property, such as patents, trademarks, and copyrights, are all intangible assets. Intangible assets exist in opposition to tangible assets, which include land, vehicles, equipment, and inventory.
Additionally, financial assets such as stocks and bonds, which derive their value from contractual claims, are considered tangible assets.




Understanding an Intangible Asset
An intangible asset can be classified as either indefinite or definite. A company's brand name is considered an indefinite intangible asset because it stays with the company for as long as it continues operations. An example of a definite intangible asset would be a legal agreement to operate under another company's patent, with no plans of extending the agreement. The agreement thus has a limited life and is classified as a definite asset.
While an intangible asset doesn't have the obvious physical value of a factory or equipment, it can prove valuable for a firm and be critical to its long-term success or failure.
For example, a business such as Coca-Cola wouldn't be nearly as successful if it not for the money made through brand recognition. Although brand recognition is not a physical asset that can be seen or touched, it can have a meaningful impact on generating sales.
Valuing Intangible Assets
Businesses can create or acquire intangible assets. For example, a business may create a mailing list of clients or establish a patent. If a business creates an intangible asset, it can write off the expenses from the process, such as filing the patent application, hiring a lawyer, and paying other related costs.
In addition, all the expenses along the way of creating the intangible asset are expensed. However, intangible assets created by a company do not appear on the balance sheet and have no recorded book value. Because of this, when a company is purchased, often the purchase price is above the book value of assets on the balance sheet. The purchasing company records the premium paid as an intangible asset on its balance sheet.
Example of Intangible Assets
Intangible assets only appear on the balance sheet if they have been acquired. If Company ABC purchases a patent from Company XYZ for an agreed-upon amount of $1 billion, then Company ABC would record a transaction for $1 billion in intangible assets that would appear under long-term assets.
The $1-billion asset would then be written off over a number of years via amortization. Indefinite life intangible assets, such as goodwill, are not amortized. Rather, these assets are assessed each year for impairment, which is when the carrying value exceeds the asset's fair value.
Related terms:
Accounting
Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more
Active Asset
An active asset can be a tangible or intangible asset used by a business in its daily or routine business operations. read more
Amortization : Formula & Calculation
Amortization is an accounting technique used to periodically lower the book value of a loan or intangible asset over a set period of time. read more
Balance Sheet : Formula & Examples
A balance sheet is a financial statement that reports a company's assets, liabilities and shareholder equity at a specific point in time. read more
Book Value : Formula & Calculation
An asset's book value is equal to its carrying value on the balance sheet, and companies calculate it by netting the asset against its accumulated depreciation. read more
Brand Recognition
Brand recognition is the extent to which the general public is able to identify a brand by its attributes. read more
Calculated Intangible Value (CIV)
Calculated intangible value is a method of valuing a company's intangible assets. Intangible assets include patents and other intellectual property. read more
Hard Asset
A hard asset is a physical object or resource owned by an individual or business. read more
Intellectual Property
Intellectual property is a set of intangibles owned and legally protected by a company from outside use or implementation without consent. read more
Invisible Assets
Invisible assets, aka intangible assets, are resources with economic value that cannot be seen or touched. read more