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Depreciation Calculator

Calculate asset depreciation using multiple methods with full schedules and tax insights

Depreciation Formulas

Straight-Line
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Declining Balance
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Sum of Years Digits
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years

Understanding Asset Depreciation

Depreciation is an accounting method that allocates the cost of a tangible asset over its useful life. It reflects the gradual consumption of an asset's economic value as it ages, wears out, or becomes obsolete. Understanding depreciation is essential for accurate financial reporting, tax planning, and business decision-making.

When a business purchases equipment, vehicles, buildings, or other long-term assets, it cannot deduct the entire cost in the year of purchase. Instead, the cost is spread over multiple years through depreciation expense. This matching principle aligns the expense recognition with the revenue the asset helps generate.

Depreciation affects both the income statement (as an expense that reduces profit) and the balance sheet (as accumulated depreciation that reduces asset value). It's a non-cash expense, meaning it doesn't involve actual cash outflow but still provides tax benefits.

Depreciation Methods Compared

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Straight-Line

Equal depreciation each year. Simplest method, best for assets with consistent utility over time.

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Declining Balance

Higher depreciation early, lower later. Matches assets that lose value quickly initially.

Double Declining

Accelerated method using 200% of straight-line rate. Popular for tax purposes.

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Sum of Years' Digits

Accelerated method with smoothly decreasing depreciation. Middle ground approach.

Common Asset Useful Lives (IRS Guidelines)

The IRS provides guidelines for asset useful lives under the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS). These recovery periods affect how quickly you can depreciate assets for tax purposes.

Asset TypeMACRS ClassUseful LifeCommon Examples
Automobiles 5-year 5 years Cars, light trucks, computers
Office Equipment 5-year 5 years Computers, printers, phones
Office Furniture 7-year 7 years Desks, chairs, cabinets
Heavy Equipment 7-year 7 years Manufacturing equipment
Land Improvements 15-year 15 years Parking lots, landscaping
Residential Rental 27.5-year 27.5 years Rental houses, apartments
Commercial Buildings 39-year 39 years Office buildings, warehouses
Restaurant Equipment 7-year 7 years Kitchen equipment, fixtures

Choosing the Right Method

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For Financial Reporting

Straight-line is most common for GAAP reporting. It provides predictable, consistent expense recognition across periods.

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For Tax Benefits

Accelerated methods (MACRS, declining balance) maximize early-year deductions, providing better time value of tax savings.

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For Vehicles & Tech

Use declining balance methods. These assets lose value quickly in early years due to wear and obsolescence.

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For Buildings

Straight-line is required for real property. Buildings depreciate slowly and consistently over decades.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between depreciation and amortization?

Depreciation applies to tangible assets (equipment, buildings, vehicles). Amortization applies to intangible assets (patents, copyrights, goodwill). Both spread cost over useful life, but use different terminology.

Can I depreciate land?

No. Land is not depreciable because it has an indefinite useful life and doesn't wear out or become obsolete. Only land improvements (parking lots, landscaping) can be depreciated.

What is salvage value?

Salvage (or residual) value is the estimated amount an asset will be worth at the end of its useful life. It's subtracted from cost to determine the depreciable amount. Many companies estimate zero salvage for simplicity.

Can I change depreciation methods?

Changing methods requires justification and may need IRS approval for tax purposes. For financial reporting, changes must be disclosed and may require restatement of prior periods under certain accounting standards.

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