Geographic · Long-Lived Assets

Remaining Countries — Long-Lived Assets

Iron Mountain Remaining Countries — Long-Lived Assets increased by 21.1% to $4.35B in Q4 2025 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric grew by 21.1%, from $3.59B to $4.35B.

Analysis

StatementSegment
CategoryCapital Allocation
SignalContext dependent
VolatilityStable
First reportedQ4 2016
Last reportedQ4 2025
Rolls up toPP&E (Net)

How to read this metric

An increase suggests ongoing capital investment and infrastructure expansion in these regions, whereas a decrease may signal asset depreciation, divestiture, or a shift in geographic capital allocation strategy.

Detailed definition

This metric measures the total book value of non-current, physical, and intangible assets located within international g...

Peer comparison

Similar to 'Other International' long-lived assets reported by multinational REITs and service providers, used to evaluate the geographic distribution of capital-intensive infrastructure.

Metric ID: irm_segment_remaining_countries_long_lived_assets

Historical Data

5 periods
 Q4 '21Q4 '22Q4 '23Q4 '24Q4 '25
Value$3.13B$3.60B$3.95B$3.59B$4.35B
QoQ Change+14.9%+9.6%-9.0%+21.1%
YoY Change+14.9%+9.6%-9.0%+21.1%
Range$3.13B$4.35B
CAGR+38.9%
Avg YoY Growth+9.2%
Median YoY Growth+12.2%

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Iron Mountain's remaining countries — long-lived assets?
Iron Mountain (IRM) reported remaining countries — long-lived assets of $4.35B in Q4 2025.
How has Iron Mountain's remaining countries — long-lived assets changed year-over-year?
Iron Mountain's remaining countries — long-lived assets increased by 21.1% year-over-year, from $3.59B to $4.35B.
What does remaining countries — long-lived assets mean?
The total value of long-term physical and intangible assets held in international regions outside of the company's primary reporting segments.