NPV vs IRR

NPV and IRR are both capital-budgeting tools. NPV tells you the dollar value an investment adds, while IRR tells you the percentage return. They often agree, but NPV is generally more reliable.

Side-by-Side Comparison

AspectNPVIRR
OutputNet present value in dollarsInternal rate of return as a percentage
Input requiredDiscount rate and cash flowsOnly cash flows
Decision ruleAccept if NPV > 0Accept if IRR > required rate of return
Reinvestment assumptionUses the explicit discount rateAssumes cash flows reinvest at the IRR
Multiple IRRsAlways gives a single valueCan produce multiple solutions for alternating cash flows

When to Use Each

Use NPV

Use NPV when you need a dollar-value measure of value creation and you have a reliable discount rate.

Use IRR

Use IRR when communicating the percentage return of an investment or comparing projects of different sizes.

Verdict

NPV is generally preferred for decision-making because it directly measures value added and avoids the multiple-IRR problem.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can NPV and IRR conflict?
Yes, with non-conventional cash flows or mutually exclusive projects of different scales.
Which is better for ranking projects?
NPV is better for ranking because it reflects absolute value creation.