Assets having a physical existence, such as cash, equipment, and real estate;...
Assets having a physical existence, such as cash, land, buildings, machinery, or claims on property, investments or goods in process. (See Intangible Assets.)
An asset that physically exists, such as land, buildings, equipment, etc. See also intangible asset.
An asset that has physical reality such as real estate, plant, equipment, inventory, or precious metals.
An asset with a physical existence, such as equipment or land.
In accounting, an asset that has physical form. Contrast with intangible asset.
An asset that represents a physical object such as land, furniture, and buildings. Under accounting rules, a tangible asset must have a useful life greater than one year, and must be used in business operations rather than being held for resale. The following types of assets are not considered to be tangible assets: items held for resale, which are considered to be inventory, cash and other liquid assets which are considered as current assets, and abstract assets such as goodwill, which are intangible assets. See also tangible equity.
An asset whose value depends on particular physical properties. These i nclude reproducible assets such as buildings or machinery and non-reproducible assets such as land, a mine, or a work of art. Also called real assets. Related: Intangible asset
Asset that can by physically touched, e.g. real estate, cash, or equipment.
A tangible asset has a value and physically exists. Land, machines, equipment, automobiles, and even currencies, are examples of tangible assets. On some financial statements, however, a nonmaterial item may often be listed as a tangible asset, such as, a payment to be made on products or goods already delivered.
An asset that has a physical form.
Real property such as buildings and machinery. Trademarks, goodwill, or accounts receivable are not considered tangible assets.