2 min read
Two kinds of lease
Both are forms of leasing, but they allocate risk differently. An operating lease is essentially renting: you use the asset for a period shorter than its useful life, then return it, and the lessor carries the residual-value risk. A finance lease (sometimes called a capital lease) runs for most of the asset's useful life and transfers most of the risks and rewards of ownership to you, even though legal title stays with the lessor. See our hire purchase vs leasing comparison for the wider picture.
Risk, balance sheet and cost
| Operating lease | Finance lease | |
|---|---|---|
| Term | Shorter than asset life | Most of the asset life |
| Residual-value risk | Lessor | You |
| Feel | Renting | Effectively buying over time |
| Best for | Fast-changing or short-need kit | Long-life kit you'll use throughout |
Accounting standards affect how each appears on your books, and the treatment has evolved — confirm the current position with your accountant. An operating lease suits equipment you want to refresh often; a finance lease suits kit you will use for most of its life.
Where ownership comes in
Neither lease type is designed to leave you owning the asset outright the way hire purchase does, though a finance lease can include a secondary rental or nominal purchase option. If outright ownership from day one matters, buying with a loan is cleaner — see buy outright or finance.
The Credicorp view
If you would rather own the equipment outright and keep your options open, a Credicorp business loan funds the purchase with no lease conditions and no personal guarantee. For pure use of fast-changing kit, an operating lease may fit; for long-life kit, a finance lease. Register to apply. Educational content, not financial or tax advice.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between an operating lease and a finance lease?
An operating lease is short-term use — you rent the asset for less than its useful life and return it, with the lessor carrying residual-value risk. A finance lease runs for most of the asset's life and transfers most ownership risks and rewards to you, even though legal title stays with the lessor.
Which lease type is right for my equipment?
An operating lease suits fast-changing or short-need kit you want to refresh often, since you simply return it. A finance lease suits long-life equipment you will use for most of its useful life. If you want to own the asset outright, hire purchase or buying with a loan is cleaner.
How do leases appear on my balance sheet?
Accounting treatment depends on current standards and has evolved in recent years, affecting whether and how a lease appears on your books. Because the rules change, confirm the position with your accountant before choosing a lease type on balance-sheet grounds.
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