Non-Current Liabilities

Finance Lease Liabilities

EchoStar Finance Lease Liabilities increased by 1642.4% to $44.05M in Q1 2026 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric grew by 61.6%, from $27.26M to $44.05M. Over 5 years (FY 2020 to FY 2025), Finance Lease Liabilities shows an upward trend with a 81.3% CAGR. This increase may warrant attention — for this metric, lower values are generally preferred.

Analysis

StatementBalance Sheet Statement
SectionNon-Current Liabilities
CategoryLeverage
SignalLower is better
VolatilityStable
First reportedQ1 2019
Last reportedQ1 2026

How to read this metric

Higher levels increase the company's long-term leverage and fixed-cost base, while lower levels indicate a more equity-funded or asset-light approach.

Detailed definition

The long-term portion of obligations for leases that are classified as financing arrangements, typically involving the e...

Peer comparison

Analyzed alongside long-term debt to determine the total contractual leverage and solvency risk of the business.

Metric ID: finance_lease_liabilities

Historical Data

12 periods
 Q4 '21Q4 '22Q4 '23Q1 '24Q2 '24Q3 '24Q4 '24Q1 '25Q2 '25Q3 '25Q4 '25Q1 '26
Value$0.00$75.29M$67.20M$60.13M$52.46M$44.62M$36.82M$27.26M$21.71M$14.82M$2.53M$44.05M
QoQ Change-10.7%-10.5%-12.8%-14.9%-17.5%-26.0%-20.4%-31.7%-82.9%>999%
YoY Change-10.7%-45.2%-54.7%-58.6%-66.8%-93.1%+61.6%
Range$0.00$75.29M
Avg YoY Growth-38.2%
Median YoY Growth-54.7%

Frequently Asked Questions

What is EchoStar's finance lease liabilities?
EchoStar (SATS) reported finance lease liabilities of $44.05M in Q1 2026.
How has EchoStar's finance lease liabilities changed year-over-year?
EchoStar's finance lease liabilities increased by 61.6% year-over-year, from $27.26M to $44.05M.
What is the long-term trend for EchoStar's finance lease liabilities?
Over 5 years (2020 to 2025), EchoStar's finance lease liabilities has grown at a 81.3% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from $129.00K to $2.53M.
What does finance lease liabilities mean?
Long-term debt owed for assets the company is buying through a lease-to-own arrangement.