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What Are Business Assets?

A business asset is anything your company owns that has economic value. Assets appear on the Balance Sheet and are one of the three building blocks of your financial position.

A business asset is anything your company owns that has economic value โ€” something that will provide future benefit. Assets appear on the left side of your Balance Sheet and are one of the three building blocks of your financial position (assets, liabilities, equity).

Understanding what counts as an asset (vs. an expense) matters because the two are treated very differently for tax and accounting purposes.

Types of Assets

Current Assets

Short-term assets that will be converted to cash or used within 12 months.

Asset

What it is

Cash and bank accounts

Money in your chequing, savings, and petty cash

Accounts Receivable

Outstanding invoices owed by customers

Inventory

Goods purchased or produced for sale

Prepaid Expenses

Payments made in advance (e.g., annual insurance premium paid upfront)

Fixed Assets (Capital Assets)

Long-term assets your business uses over multiple years. Also called tangible assets or capital property.

Asset

Examples

Equipment

Computers, machinery, tools, printers

Vehicles

Company cars, vans, trucks

Furniture and fixtures

Desks, shelving, display cases

Leasehold improvements

Renovations to a rented space

Buildings

Owned commercial or industrial property

Intangible Assets

Non-physical assets with long-term value.

Asset

Examples

Goodwill

The value of an acquired business's reputation and customer relationships

Patents and trademarks

Intellectual property

Software

Purchased software licenses (longer-term)

Assets vs. Expenses: The Key Distinction

This is where many business owners get confused.

An expense is something consumed in the current period โ€” you buy it and it's used up. Office supplies, fuel, a monthly software subscription.

An asset is something that provides value over multiple years โ€” you buy it and it keeps contributing to your business. A laptop, a vehicle, a piece of equipment.

The threshold matters for tax: the CRA expects assets over a certain value to be capitalized (recorded as an asset, then depreciated over time) rather than expensed all at once.

If you're unsure whether a purchase is an asset or an expense, the general guide:

  • Under ~$500 and single use: Likely an expense
  • Over ~$500 and used for more than one year: Likely an asset โ€” ask your Mesa CPA bookkeeper

There's no hard universal rule โ€” the CRA uses judgment and context. Your bookkeeper will advise.

How Assets Are Valued on the Balance Sheet

Assets are recorded at their cost โ€” what you paid for them. Over time, fixed assets are reduced by amortization (called CCA for tax purposes) to reflect that they wear out or become obsolete. The remaining value on the Balance Sheet is called the net book value.


FAQ

Is my home office a business asset?

Generally no โ€” home office expenses are typically deducted as a portion of your household costs, not recorded as a business asset. If you own a property used exclusively for business, that's different. Talk to your Mesa CPA advisor.


What happens to assets when I sell the business?

Assets are typically part of a business sale, either as part of an asset sale (you sell the assets directly) or a share sale (you sell the corporation, which owns the assets). The tax treatment differs significantly between the two. Your Mesa CPA advisor can walk through the implications.


Can I claim the full cost of an asset as an expense in year one?

In some cases, yes โ€” the CRA has rules around the Immediate Expensing deduction that may allow full expensing of certain eligible property in the year of purchase. This is a tax planning item, not a bookkeeping decision. Ask your Mesa CPA advisor.


What's the difference between amortization and depreciation?

For practical purposes, the terms are used interchangeably. Technically, "depreciation" is the accounting concept (reducing book value over time) and "amortization" is also used for intangible assets. For Canadian tax purposes, the CCA (Capital Cost Allowance) system governs the deductible rate of decline.