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Depreciation: What It Is, How to Calculate It, and How It Helps Optimize Your Business Finances

Julian Drago
September 17, 2025

Depreciation is the accounting mechanism that allows you to recognize the wear, obsolescence, or loss of value of your fixed assets over time. By recording it properly, you reflect a more realistic value of your assets in financial statements, allocate expenses to the periods in which the asset generates income, and make better decisions about replacement, investment, and cash flow.

In addition, in the United States, depreciation has a significant tax impact: certain methods are deductible and can reduce your taxable base under IRS regulations.

This article will guide you step by step through the key concepts: how depreciation works, the most common methods, the variables you need to define, practical examples, and typical tax considerations in the U.S.

What Is Depreciation (and Why It Matters)?

When you purchase an asset for your business—such as a computer, a machine, or a vehicle—that asset loses value over time due to use, age, or the emergence of more efficient technologies.

Depreciation distributes that cost across the asset’s estimated useful life so that each period records a portion of the expense.

Depreciation is the accounting method to record the loss of value of fixed assets.

Why Is It Essential?

  • True valuation: prevents overstatement of equity and “inflated” profits.
  • Expense–income matching: allocates the asset cost to the periods that benefit from its use.
  • Cash planning: helps forecast capex (replacement/updates) and sustain operations without surprises.
  • Tax efficiency: in the U.S., IRS-approved methods allow depreciation to be deducted under specific rules.

Depreciation vs. Amortization vs. Impairment

  • Depreciation: loss of value of tangible assets (equipment, furniture, buildings, vehicles).
  • Amortization: systematic allocation of intangible asset costs (licenses, patents, purchased software).
  • Impairment: unscheduled loss from extraordinary circumstances (damage, market shifts). Impairment does not replace depreciation—it complements it when necessary.

Key Variables in Your Calculation

  • Asset cost: purchase price plus costs to make it usable (transport, installation, non-recoverable taxes).
  • Useful life: expected period of economic benefit, based on real operating conditions.
  • Residual (salvage) value: estimated recovery amount at the end of useful life.
  • Depreciation method: reflects the consumption pattern (straight-line, accelerated, or based on use/production).

Review useful life and method annually and adjust prospectively if conditions change.

Common Depreciation Methods

  1. Straight-Line Method
    • Assumes uniform consumption. Same expense every period.
    • Formula:
    • Annual Expense=Cost – ResidualUseful Life (years)\text{Annual Expense} = \frac{\text{Cost – Residual}}{\text{Useful Life (years)}}Annual Expense=Useful Life (years)Cost – Residual​
    • Best for office equipment, furniture, and buildings.
  2. Declining Balance (e.g., Double Declining)
    • Higher expense at the beginning, lower later. Reflects assets that perform more early on.
  3. Sum-of-the-Years-Digits
    • Accelerates expenses with a numeric progression. Useful when benefits decrease rapidly in the early years.
  4. Units of Production
    • Based on actual use (machine hours, units produced, miles driven). Best when wear relates to activity rather than time.

No method is universally “best”—the right one reflects the asset’s consumption of benefits.

Ejemplos prácticos

  • Straight-Line: $12,000 computer, 4-year life, no residual → $3,000 annual expense.
  • Double Declining Balance: $10,000 machine, 5 years, 40% annual depreciation on book value.
  • Units of Production: $50,000 asset, $5,000 residual, 100,000 total units, 22,000 units used in year 1 → $9,900 expense.

Accounting Recognition

  • Income Statement: Depreciation expense.
  • Balance Sheet: Accumulated depreciation reduces book value.

Note: depreciation is a non-cash expense—it’s an allocation, not an outflow.

Always remember that your accounting and tax depreciation may differ.

Special Cases

  • Land: usually not depreciated.
  • Assets under construction: depreciation starts when available for use.
  • Fully depreciated but in use: no further depreciation; reassess replacement.
  • Improvements: capitalized if they extend life or increase capacity; routine maintenance is expensed.

U.S. Tax Considerations

  • MACRS: IRS-defined asset classes with recovery periods (different from accounting life).
  • Section 179: allows immediate expensing of eligible equipment, subject to limits.
  • Bonus depreciation: accelerates deductions in the first year; availability depends on current tax law.

Key tips:

  • Track differences between accounting and tax depreciation (deferred taxes).
  • Verify IRS rules annually (limits, eligible property, phaseouts).
  • Check state conformity—rules may vary.

Best Practices for Your Business

  • Define clear policies (capitalization thresholds, methods by asset type).
  • Componentization for complex assets (e.g., facilities with varying lifespans).
  • Perform annual reviews of useful life and residual values.
  • Maintain an asset register (date, cost, location, method, accumulated depreciation).
  • Align with tax strategy: simulate MACRS, Section 179, and bonus depreciation before purchasing.

FAQs on Depreciation

  1. Which method should I use?
    The one that best reflects the asset’s consumption pattern.
  2. Can I change methods later?
    Yes, if usage changes—apply prospectively and disclose.
  3. What if I sell an asset early?
    Record gain or loss = sale price – book value, plus tax effects.
  4. Does depreciation always reduce taxes?
    In the U.S., yes—if IRS requirements are met.
  5. How do I estimate residual value?
    Use market references, sales history, or internal policies.

Mastering depreciation gives you control over profitability, investment planning, and tax burden. If you are setting up operations in the U.S. or need to align accounting with IRS rules, Openbiz can help: we design policies, run simulations, and choose the depreciation scheme that fits your business best.

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