IFRS 16 Leases, effective from 1 January 2019, fundamentally changed how businesses account for leases. Under the previous standard (IAS 17), most operating leases were off-balance-sheet — simply charged as rental expense. IFRS 16 brings virtually all leases onto the balance sheet.

The Core Change

For every lease with a term exceeding 12 months and an underlying asset value above a low-value threshold, lessees must recognise:

  • A Right-of-Use (ROU) Asset — representing the right to use the leased asset
  • A Lease Liability — representing the obligation to make future lease payments

Impact on Financial Ratios

Because both assets and liabilities increase, key ratios change significantly:

  • Debt-to-equity ratio increases (higher liabilities)
  • EBITDA improves (lease expense replaced by depreciation + interest)
  • Return on Assets may initially decline

Common Leases Affected in Kenya

  • Office and retail premises
  • Motor vehicle leases
  • Equipment and plant hire agreements
  • IT equipment leases

Our IFRS team helps businesses correctly identify leases under IFRS 16, calculate ROU assets and liabilities, and prepare the required disclosures.

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