Other

Impairment Of Long Lived Assets Held For Use

Dollar Tree Impairment Of Long Lived Assets Held For Use remained flat by 0.0% to $2.25M in Q4 2025 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric declined by 82.7%, from $13.03M to $2.25M. Over 4 years (FY 2021 to FY 2025), Impairment Of Long Lived Assets Held For Use shows an upward trend with a 19.6% CAGR. This is a positive signal — lower values indicate better performance for this metric.

Analysis

StatementIncome Statement
SectionOther
CategoryRisk
SignalLower is better
VolatilityVolatile
First reportedQ1 2013
Last reportedQ4 2025Mar 16, 2026

How to read this metric

Frequent or large impairment charges signal poor capital allocation, declining asset utility, or adverse changes in the industry environment.

Detailed definition

This represents a non-cash charge taken when the carrying value of a long-lived asset, such as a refinery or plant, exce...

Peer comparison

Reported by most capital-intensive firms; peers may label this as Asset Impairment or Write-downs.

Metric ID: other_impairment_of_long_lived_assets_held_for_use

Historical Data

5 years
 FY'21FY'22FY'23FY'24FY'25
Value$4.40M$1.40M$10.90M$52.10M$9.00M
YoY Change-68.2%+678.6%+378.0%-82.7%
Range$1.40M$52.10M
CAGR+19.6%
Avg YoY Growth+226.4%
Median YoY Growth+154.9%

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Dollar Tree's impairment of long lived assets held for use?
Dollar Tree (DLTR) reported impairment of long lived assets held for use of $2.25M in Q4 2025.
How has Dollar Tree's impairment of long lived assets held for use changed year-over-year?
Dollar Tree's impairment of long lived assets held for use decreased by 82.7% year-over-year, from $13.03M to $2.25M.
What is the long-term trend for Dollar Tree's impairment of long lived assets held for use?
Over 4 years (2021 to 2025), Dollar Tree's impairment of long lived assets held for use has grown at a 19.6% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from $4.40M to $9.00M.
What does impairment of long lived assets held for use mean?
A reduction in the recorded value of assets because they are worth less than what is on the books.