Company: KAVL
Filing Date: 2025-09-16
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0001731122-25-001266
Chunk: 82

Company: Kaival Brands Innovations Group, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-09-16
Form: 10-Q
Item: Item 8
Chunk 82
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 lease
unless that rate cannot be readily determined. When the interest rate implicit in the lease is not readily determinable, the interest
rate used to determine the present value of the future lease payments is the Company’s Incremental Borrowing Rate (“IBR”).
The IBR is a hypothetical rate based on the Company’s understanding of what its credit rating would be to borrow and resulting interest
the Company would pay to borrow an amount equal to the lease payments in a similar economic environment over the lease term on a collateralized
basis. Periods covered by the Company’s option to extend or terminate the lease are included in the lease term when it is reasonably
certain that the Company will exercise its option to extend or not exercise its option to terminate, as applicable.

Lease payments may be fixed or variable; however,
only fixed payments or in-substance fixed payments are included in the Company’s lease liability calculation. Variable lease payments
may include costs such as common area maintenance, utilities, real estate taxes or other costs. Variable lease payments are recognized
in operating expenses in the period in which the obligations for those payments are incurred. The Company records rent expense for its
operating lease, which has escalating rent payments, on a straight-line basis over the lease term. The Company does not have any financing
leases.

The Company made a policy election not to separate
non-lease components from lease components for all its leases; therefore, it accounts for lease and non-lease components as a single lease
component. The Company also elected the short-term lease recognition exemption for all leases that qualify, such that leases with a term
of 12 months or less are not recognized on the balance sheet.

Impairment of Long-Lived Assets

The Company reviews its long-lived assets, which includes
definite-lived intangibles, long-lived fixed assets and lease right-of-use assets, for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances
indicate the carrying amount of an asset may not be recoverable. Factors that could trigger an impairment review include significant under-performance
relative to expected historical or projected future operating results, significant changes in the manner of the Company’s use of
the acquired assets or the strategy for the Company’s overall business or significant negative industry or economic trends. If this
evaluation indicates that the value of the long-lived asset may be impaired, the Company makes an assessment of the recoverability of
the net carrying value of the asset over its remaining useful life. If this assessment indicates that the long-lived asset is not recover