EBITA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, and Amortization) Key points
* EBITA is a non-GAAP measure of profitability that adds back interest, taxes, and amortization to net earnings.
* It can help compare operating performance across companies by removing financing, tax, and certain accounting effects.
* Use caution: EBITA excludes real costs (interest, taxes, amortization) and is not standardized, so it can overstate cash-generation and be misleading if used alone.
What is EBITA? EBITA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, and Amortization. It measures a company's operating profitability while excluding:
Interest expense (financing costs),
Income taxes, and
* Amortization (the systematic write-off of intangible assets). Because it omits these items, EBITA is a non-GAAP metric used by analysts and investors to assess operational performance and compare companies within an industry. Explore More Resources

How to calculate EBITA There are two common ways to compute EBITA from financial statements:
1. From earnings before tax (EBT):
EBITA = EBT + Interest Expense + Amortization Expense Explore More Resources

  2. From operating profit (EBIT):

EBITA = EBIT + Amortization Expense
Amortization is typically found in the notes to the financial statements or the cash flow statement. Interest, taxes, and earnings figures appear on the income statement. Explore More Resources

Example:
If EBT = $100, Interest = $10, Amortization = $5, then EBITA = $100 + $10 + $5 = $115. EBITA vs. EBITDA EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) is similar to EBITA but also adds back depreciation, which reflects wear and tear on tangible assets.
EBITDA is more commonly used, especially for asset-heavy industries (manufacturing, utilities, telecom) where depreciation is significant.
EBITA may be preferred for companies with minimal tangible-asset depreciation or when analysts want to exclude only intangible write-offs. Explore More Resources

Both metrics aim to isolate operating profitability, but neither is standardized and both can mask true cash costs like capital expenditures. EBITA vs. GAAP earnings GAAP earnings follow standardized accounting rules and include interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. Non-GAAP measures such as EBIT, EBITA, and EBITDA exclude certain items (and sometimes one-time charges) to present an adjusted view of performance.
Because non-GAAP measures are not uniformly defined, companies may present them differently, so comparisons require care. Explore More Resources

Where to find or derive EBITA Companies are not required to report EBITA. To derive it:
Use the income statement for EBT/EBIT and interest figures.
Check the notes or cash flow statement for amortization.
Alternatively, start with reported EBIT and add amortization. Uses and limitations Uses:
Comparing operating performance across firms with different capital structures or tax situations.
* Assessing operational efficiency without financing and certain accounting effects. Explore More Resources

Limitations:
Excludes real expenses (interest and taxes) and non-cash but economically relevant charges (amortization).
Non-GAAP and not standardized β€” companies may calculate it differently.
* Can overstate a business’s cash-generation ability, especially when capital expenditures and debt service are material. Bottom line EBITA is a useful shorthand for assessing operating performance by stripping out financing, tax, and intangible write-offs. However, because it excludes important costs and lacks a standardized definition, it should be used alongside GAAP measures and other cash-flow metrics (like free cash flow) to get a complete picture of a company's financial health. Explore More Resources