Learn what the accounting rate of return measures, how it differs from NPV and IRR, and why finance teams still use it despite its limitations.
The accounting rate of return (ARR) is a project-evaluation metric that compares expected accounting profit with the investment required.
It is widely known because it is simple. It is also limited because it relies on accounting profit instead of discounted cash flow.
A common version is:
Some firms use average investment in the denominator instead of initial investment, so the exact formula can vary by company policy.
Suppose a project requires an initial investment of $200,000 and is expected to generate average annual accounting profit of $30,000.
The project’s accounting rate of return is 15%.
ARR remains popular because it is:
It can be useful as a quick first screen or as a reporting metric inside organizations that think in terms of accounting profit targets.
ARR has real limitations.
A dollar earned early is treated the same as a dollar earned later.
Depreciation, accruals, and other accounting conventions can affect the result.
Projects with strong ARR may still have weak economics once timing and cash flow are analyzed properly.
That is why serious investment decisions usually rely more heavily on net present value (NPV) and internal rate of return (IRR).
ARR asks:
NPV and IRR ask:
That makes ARR easier to compute, but usually less reliable for ranking competing long-term investments.
ARR can still help when:
It becomes dangerous when it replaces discounted cash-flow analysis for major capital allocation decisions.