A side-by-side definition of the two lease classifications, the balance-sheet treatment each one demands, and the post-IFRS 16 / NIIF 16 changes that have largely closed the gap on the consolidated reporting side without erasing it on the SME accounting side.
Lessor retains ownership and substantive risk. The lessee uses the asset across the lease term and returns it at expiry. Payments enter the income statement as rental expense without the asset appearing on the balance sheet.
Under the older Plan General de Contabilidad SME guidance, an operating lease produces a clean income-statement entry each period. The asset never lands on the SME's books; the lessor depreciates it on theirs.
Post-NIIF 16, consolidated entities filing under IFRS treat most leases as right-of-use assets regardless of legal classification. SMEs filing under PGC PYMES retain the operating-lease simplification.
Lessor transfers substantive risk and reward of ownership to the lessee, typically through an end-of-term purchase option at a token price (often €1 or a small fraction of fair value). The substance is a financed purchase.
The lessee recognises a right-of-use asset and a corresponding finance liability at inception. Depreciation lands in the income statement; the finance-charge portion of each payment lands as interest expense.
In Spain a copier on a capital lease typically signals a purchase intent at the term end. Outright purchases at month forty-eight through capital-lease structures sit on the books like any other capital asset acquired with credit financing.
The distinction between an operating lease and a capital lease exists for a single accounting reason: the question of who carries the asset on their books. The classification determines whether a lease shows up as a rental expense each period or as a right-of-use asset plus a corresponding liability on the balance sheet. The same monthly cash payment produces visibly different financial statements depending on which classification the auditor applies, and the distinction matters when an office's banking relationship, investor reporting, or KPI calculations depend on those statements.
For a Spanish pyme accounting under PGC PYMES, the historical classification framework still applies. An office signing a 48-month copier lease with a fair-market-value buyout option at term end signs an operating lease. The same office signing the same 48-month term with a €1 purchase option at month 48 signs a capital lease, and the accounting team has to put the device on the balance sheet from day one. The distinction below walks through both classifications and what each implies for the books.
The balance sheet remains untouched. The income statement shows €145 per month under "Servicios exteriores · Arrendamientos." The auditor reviews the lease agreement to confirm classification but does not journal an asset onto the books.
The balance sheet shows a new asset and a matching liability at lease inception. Each monthly payment splits between principal repayment (reducing the liability) and interest expense (hitting the income statement). The depreciation runs separately on the asset side.
NIIF 16 (and its international twin IFRS 16) took effect for fiscal years beginning on or after 1 January 2019 and eliminated the operating-vs-capital distinction for consolidated entities reporting under international standards. Under the new framework, nearly every lease longer than 12 months produces a right-of-use asset and a corresponding lease liability — regardless of whether the historical classification would have called it an operating lease or a capital lease.
For most Spanish pymes signing a copier deal in 2026, the classification matters in three places: the appearance of the balance sheet to lenders, the debt-equity ratio used in covenant calculations, and the IS deduction timing on the tax return. An office with covenant-sensitive financing tends to prefer operating-lease structures to keep the right-of-use asset off the balance sheet. An office with no such concern can sign either structure based on cash-flow and tax considerations alone.
The procurement decision and the accounting classification are separable conversations. A buyer can negotiate the same monthly payment under either an operating-lease or capital-lease structure depending on the buyout option attached. The dealer typically defaults to whichever structure aligns with their preferred residual-value treatment; the buyer can request the other structure if the books would prefer it. Ask the question at term-sheet stage rather than discovering the classification at signing.