Gain/Loss on Sale of PPE
Profit or Loss Realized When Disposing of Property, Plant, and Equipment
Gain/Loss on Sale of PPE is the difference between the cash (or equivalent) proceeds received from selling property, plant, and equipment and the asset's net book value (original cost minus accumulated depreciation) at the time of sale. A positive difference is a gain; a negative one is a loss. This non-operating item appears in the income statement and reflects the outcome of asset disposal decisions.
How It Arises
Every time a company sells a tangible fixed asset—whether a building, machine, vehicle, or furniture—the difference between what it gets and what the asset is worth on the books becomes a realized gain or loss.
Net book value = Original cost − Accumulated depreciation up to sale date.
The gain/loss captures whether the asset was sold above or below its depreciated value.
A Clear Example
Company bought a delivery truck 5 years ago for $100,000.
- Accumulated depreciation: $60,000
- Net book value now: $40,000
- Sells truck for $45,000 cash
- Gain on Sale of PPE: +$5,000 (income)
- If sold for $35,000 → $5,000 loss (expense)
Cash flow: +$45,000 investing inflow; -$5,000 non-cash subtraction (gain) in operating (indirect method).
Common Scenarios
- Upgrading equipment (sell old, buy new)
- Closing facilities (dispose buildings/machines)
- Fleet renewal (sell aging vehicles)
- Real estate sales (surplus land/buildings)
- Restructuring or downsizing
Gains common when assets appreciate (real estate) or depreciate slower than book; losses from obsolescence or distress sales.
Accounting Treatment
- Remove asset and accumulated depreciation from balance sheet
- Record cash proceeds
- Recognize difference as gain/loss in income statement
- Cash flow: Proceeds in investing; gain/loss non-cash adjustment
Usually 'Other income/expense' or sometimes operating if frequent.
Presentation
Income statement:
- 'Gain (Loss) on Sale of PPE'
- 'Gain (Loss) on Disposal of Assets'
- Net amount if multiple transactions
Cash flow: Proceeds in investing; gain/loss in operating reconciliation.
What It Signals
- Asset optimization (selling underutilized items)
- Upgrade cycle timing
- Restructuring or footprint reduction
- Real estate value capture
- Potential one-time earnings boost (gains)
Frequent gains may mask weak core operations; losses signal write-downs.
Key Takeaways
Difference between sale proceeds and net book value of disposed PP&E.
Gain = sold above book; Loss = below.
Non-operating income/expense.
Cash proceeds in investing; gain/loss non-cash.
Reflects asset disposal decisions and timing.
Common during upgrades, closures, or portfolio cleanup.
Gain/Loss on Sale of PPE
Profit or Loss Realized When Disposing of Property, Plant, and Equipment
Gain/Loss on Sale of PPE is the difference between the cash (or equivalent) proceeds received from selling property, plant, and equipment and the asset's net book value (original cost minus accumulated depreciation) at the time of sale. A positive difference is a gain; a negative one is a loss. This non-operating item appears in the income statement and reflects the outcome of asset disposal decisions.
Table of Contents
How It Arises
Every time a company sells a tangible fixed asset—whether a building, machine, vehicle, or furniture—the difference between what it gets and what the asset is worth on the books becomes a realized gain or loss.
Net book value = Original cost − Accumulated depreciation up to sale date.
The gain/loss captures whether the asset was sold above or below its depreciated value.
A Clear Example
Company bought a delivery truck 5 years ago for $100,000.
- Accumulated depreciation: $60,000
- Net book value now: $40,000
- Sells truck for $45,000 cash
- Gain on Sale of PPE: +$5,000 (income)
- If sold for $35,000 → $5,000 loss (expense)
Cash flow: +$45,000 investing inflow; -$5,000 non-cash subtraction (gain) in operating (indirect method).
Common Scenarios
- Upgrading equipment (sell old, buy new)
- Closing facilities (dispose buildings/machines)
- Fleet renewal (sell aging vehicles)
- Real estate sales (surplus land/buildings)
- Restructuring or downsizing
Gains common when assets appreciate (real estate) or depreciate slower than book; losses from obsolescence or distress sales.
Accounting Treatment
- Remove asset and accumulated depreciation from balance sheet
- Record cash proceeds
- Recognize difference as gain/loss in income statement
- Cash flow: Proceeds in investing; gain/loss non-cash adjustment
Usually 'Other income/expense' or sometimes operating if frequent.
Presentation
Income statement:
- 'Gain (Loss) on Sale of PPE'
- 'Gain (Loss) on Disposal of Assets'
- Net amount if multiple transactions
Cash flow: Proceeds in investing; gain/loss in operating reconciliation.
What It Signals
- Asset optimization (selling underutilized items)
- Upgrade cycle timing
- Restructuring or footprint reduction
- Real estate value capture
- Potential one-time earnings boost (gains)
Frequent gains may mask weak core operations; losses signal write-downs.
Key Takeaways
Difference between sale proceeds and net book value of disposed PP&E.
Gain = sold above book; Loss = below.
Non-operating income/expense.
Cash proceeds in investing; gain/loss non-cash.
Reflects asset disposal decisions and timing.
Common during upgrades, closures, or portfolio cleanup.
Related Terms
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