Useful Life Estimation for Intangible Assets

Useful Life Estimation for Intangible Assets

Why Useful Life Matters

The useful life of an intangible asset determines two things that have significant financial impact: the period over which future cash flows are projected in a valuation (affecting the asset's fair value), and the period over which the asset is amortised on the balance sheet (affecting annual earnings).

An overestimated useful life inflates the asset's fair value by including cash flows that may never materialise. An underestimated useful life depresses the value and front-loads amortisation, reducing reported earnings in the near term. Getting the useful life right is therefore critical to both the accuracy of the purchase price allocation and the quality of subsequent financial reporting.

10-30% valuation impact from a 2-year useful life change
3 types of "life" — legal, economic, and useful
IAS 38 / ASC 350 governing standards for useful life assessment
★ Key Takeaway

Useful life is not the same as legal life or economic life. It is the period over which the asset is expected to contribute to the entity's cash flows — which may be shorter than the legal protection period or the asset's theoretical economic existence.


Three Types of Life

Type Definition Example
Legal life Period of legal protection Patent: 20 years from filing
Economic life Period of economic utility to any owner Technology: until obsolete
Useful life Period of economic benefit to this entity Technology: until the entity stops using it

The useful life cannot exceed the economic life, and the economic life cannot exceed the legal life (for legally protected assets). In practice, the useful life is often shorter than both, because the specific entity may have plans that limit the asset's utilisation period.

✔ Example

A patent has a remaining legal life of 12 years, but the underlying technology is expected to be superseded by newer alternatives within 7 years (economic life). The acquiring company plans to transition to a different technology platform within 5 years (useful life). For valuation purposes, the useful life is 5 years — the period over which the patent will actually generate cash flows for this entity.


Factors Affecting Useful Life

IAS 38 and ASC 350 both provide guidance on the factors to consider when estimating useful life:

Asset-Specific Factors

Factor Impact
Contractual or legal term Sets maximum life for contract-based assets
Expected usage pattern Declining usage suggests shorter life
Technical obsolescence Faster innovation = shorter life
Commercial obsolescence Market shifts can shorten useful life
Stability of the industry Volatile industries = shorter asset lives
Expected actions of competitors Competitive pressure accelerates obsolescence
Maintenance investment required Higher maintenance can extend life
Relationship to other assets Life may be limited by associated assets

Entity-Specific Factors

Factor Impact
Entity's planned use of the asset Strategic plans may limit utilisation
Expected disposal or abandonment Planned transitions shorten useful life
Integration plans Merging with existing systems may extend or shorten life
Management track record History of technology refresh cycles
Market position Market leaders can extend asset lives through dominance

Estimation Methods

Analytical Methods

Attrition analysis (customer relationships)

Model the expected customer attrition curve and determine the point at which the surviving customer base no longer generates material cash flows. The useful life is typically defined as the period capturing 90-95% of total projected cash flows.

Technology lifecycle analysis (technology assets)

Assess the innovation cycle in the relevant industry, the maintenance investment required to keep the technology current, and the expected timeline for replacement technologies to emerge.

Contractual analysis (contract-based assets)

Start with the contractual term, then assess the probability and expected duration of renewals based on historical data and market practice.

Comparable asset analysis

Review useful lives assigned to similar assets in comparable PPA transactions. Industry databases and published deal summaries provide benchmarks.

Typical Useful Life Ranges

Asset Type Typical Range Key Driver
Customer relationships (SaaS) 7-15 years Net revenue retention, attrition rate
Customer relationships (traditional) 5-12 years Contract renewal rates
Trade names (established) 10-25 years or indefinite Brand strength, market position
Technology (software) 3-7 years Innovation cycle, obsolescence
Technology (industrial) 5-15 years Industry stability
Patents Remaining legal term Up to 20 years
Non-compete agreements Contractual term Typically 2-5 years
In-process R&D Indefinite until complete Then finite life assigned
Order backlog Fulfilment period Typically 6-24 months
Favourable contracts Remaining contract term No renewal assumed

Indefinite vs Finite Life

Under IAS 38, an intangible asset has an indefinite useful life if there is no foreseeable limit to the period over which it is expected to generate net cash inflows. This does not mean infinite — it means that no expiry can be predicted. Indefinite-life assets are not amortised but are tested for impairment annually.

Finite Life

  • Foreseeable limit on cash-generating period
  • Amortised over useful life
  • Tested for impairment if indicators exist
  • Most intangible assets

Indefinite Life

  • No foreseeable limit on cash generation
  • Not amortised
  • Tested for impairment annually
  • Strong brands, some licences, goodwill
⚠ Warning

The indefinite life classification requires strong evidence. Auditors will challenge an indefinite life assertion unless the entity can demonstrate that the asset will continue generating cash flows without foreseeable decline. Historical performance, competitive position, and absence of obsolescence risk must all support the classification. When in doubt, assign a finite life.


Amortisation Patterns

Once the useful life is determined, the next question is the pattern of amortisation. IAS 38 requires the amortisation method to reflect the pattern in which the asset's economic benefits are consumed:

Pattern When Appropriate Example
Straight-line Benefits consumed evenly Trade names, licences
Accelerated Benefits front-loaded Technology (high early revenue, declining over time)
Revenue-based Benefits proportional to revenue Some customer relationships (revenue-weighted attrition)
ℹ Note

Revenue-based amortisation is generally prohibited under IAS 38 (amended 2014) and ASC 350, with a narrow exception for intangible assets where the predominant limitation on useful life is the achievement of a revenue threshold (e.g., a licence that expires after a specified revenue level is reached).


The WARUL Cross-Check

The Weighted Average Remaining Useful Life (WARUL) provides a useful aggregate cross-check. It is the weighted average of the useful lives of all identified intangible assets, with each asset weighted by its fair value:

WARUL = Sum of (Fair Value_i / Total Intangible Value) x Useful Life_i

A WARUL that is significantly shorter or longer than expected for the industry may indicate that individual useful life estimates need revisiting. For technology acquisitions, a WARUL of 6-10 years is typical; for pharmaceutical acquisitions, 10-15 years is more common.

The Bottom Line

Useful life estimation requires a combination of analytical methods, industry knowledge, and professional judgement. Start with the legal and contractual boundaries, narrow to economic life based on obsolescence and competition, and further narrow to the entity-specific useful life based on management's plans. Document the rationale thoroughly — this is an area of frequent audit challenge. The Opagio Calculator models useful life scenarios and shows the valuation impact of different life assumptions. Test your useful life assumptions.


Ivan Gowan is the Founder and CEO of Opagio. His 25 years in fintech — including managing technology platforms through multiple upgrade cycles at IG Group — provides practical understanding of how technology useful lives play out in practice. Meet the team.

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Ivan Gowan

Ivan Gowan — CEO, Co-Founder

25 years as tech entrepreneur, exited Angel

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