Income StatementIntermediate📖 7 min read

Occupancy and Equipment

Costs Related to Physical Facilities and Operational Equipment

Nature
Recurring facility and equipment overhead
Common Items
Rent, utilities, maintenance, property taxes
Behavior
Largely fixed; some variable with usage
Key Metric
Occupancy cost as % of revenue

Occupancy and Equipment expense encompasses the recurring costs associated with maintaining and operating a company's physical facilities and non-capitalized equipment. This operating expense line typically includes rent or lease payments for buildings and land (pre-lease capitalization standards), utilities, property taxes, insurance on facilities, janitorial services, repairs and maintenance of buildings/equipment, and depreciation on certain equipment not classified elsewhere. It reflects the ongoing overhead of physical infrastructure and is particularly significant in retail, hospitality, manufacturing, and branch-based businesses. As a largely fixed cost, it contributes to operating leverage and is monitored for efficiency relative to revenue growth.

Table of Contents

What is Occupancy and Equipment Expense?

Occupancy and Equipment expense covers the ongoing costs of maintaining the physical infrastructure needed for operations, excluding capitalized assets' depreciation (often separate).

Pre-ASC 842/IFRS 16 (pre-2019), it prominently included operating lease rent. Post-adoption, long-term leases are capitalized (right-of-use asset depreciation + interest), so this line now focuses more on short-term rents, utilities, maintenance, and taxes.

It is an operating expense because facilities and equipment are essential to revenue generation, reported in cost of revenue (production-related) or operating expenses (administrative/retail).

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Critical for brick-and-mortar businesses—retailers track 'occupancy cost %' as key performance indicator.

Common Components

Typical items in Occupancy and Equipment expense:

Key Elements

  • Rent/lease payments (short-term or variable post-lease standard)
  • Utilities (electricity, water, heating, internet)
  • Property taxes on owned facilities
  • Building insurance and maintenance contracts
  • Repairs and maintenance (non-capitalized)
  • Janitorial and security services
  • Common area maintenance (CAM) charges in leased spaces
  • Equipment rental (copiers, vehicles not capitalized)
  • Waste removal and landscaping

Depreciation on buildings/equipment may be included or separate.

How It Appears in the Income Statement

Common reporting:

Placement

  • Within Other Operating Expenses
  • Separate line in detailed breakdowns
  • Part of Cost of Revenue (production facilities)
  • In SG&A for administrative occupancy

Reduces operating income; largely fixed nature aids leverage with revenue growth.

Tip: Post-lease capitalization, headline occupancy drops—use supplemental disclosures for cash rent.

Examples

Example 1: Retail Chain

Store rent (short-term/variable): $400M Utilities & maintenance: $150M Property taxes/insurance: $100M CAM charges: $80M Occupancy & Equipment: $730M (~12% of revenue).

Example 2: Manufacturer

Factory utilities: $60M Building maintenance: $40M Property taxes: $30M Equipment rental: $20M Occupancy & Equipment: $150M.

Retail/hospitality: 8-15% revenue; manufacturing lower due to ownership.

Importance in Financial Analysis

Analysts track occupancy & equipment to: - Measure facility efficiency (cost per sq ft or store) - Assess operating leverage (fixed costs decline % with scale) - Evaluate location strategy (owned vs. leased) - Forecast margin expansion potential

Rising costs without revenue growth signal inflation or expansion drag.

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Warning: Lease capitalization shifted costs—use cash rent from supplements for historical consistency.

Key Takeaways

1

Occupancy & Equipment covers ongoing facility and equipment support costs.

2

Includes rent (short-term), utilities, maintenance, taxes—largely fixed.

3

Significant in retail/hospitality; lower in asset-light models.

4

Monitor as % revenue for overhead efficiency and leverage.

5

Post-lease standard, supplement with cash rent disclosures for full picture.

Related Terms

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