Funds spent by a business to acquire, upgrade, or maintain long-term physical assets such as property, equipment, or technology infrastructure.
Capital expenditure (CapEx) is money invested in assets that will benefit the business over multiple years. Unlike operating expenses (OpEx) which are fully expensed in the period incurred, CapEx is capitalized on the balance sheet and depreciated over the asset's useful life. Examples include buying machinery, constructing a building, purchasing vehicles, or investing in major software systems. The CapEx decision involves evaluating ROI, payback period, and the asset's contribution to future revenue.
A manufacturing company spends ₹50,00,000 on a new CNC machine with a 10-year life. Instead of expensing the full amount in Year 1, it capitalizes the asset and records ₹5,00,000 depreciation expense annually.
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CapEx is spent on long-term assets (machinery, buildings) and capitalized on the balance sheet. OpEx is spent on daily operations (salaries, rent, utilities) and fully expensed on the income statement. CapEx creates future value; OpEx maintains current operations.
OpEx is immediately tax-deductible, doesn't require large upfront investment, and provides more flexibility. This is why cloud SaaS subscriptions (OpEx) are replacing on-premise software purchases (CapEx) for many businesses.
The systematic allocation of the cost of a tangible asset over its useful life, representing the decline in value due to wear, use, or obsolescence.
A financial statement that shows a company's assets, liabilities, and equity at a specific point in time.
The net amount of cash and cash equivalents moving into and out of a business during a specific period.
A financial metric that measures the profitability of an investment by comparing the net profit to the cost of the investment, expressed as a percentage.
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