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Table of Contents

Depreciation is a method of allocating the cost of a fixed asset over its estimated useful life.  

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In order to track depreciation, the depreciation information of an item record must be complete. This includes:

Depreciation Field

Explanation

Depreciation Method

This field must have one of the following values: None for no depreciation; Straight line depreciation (most widely used by schools.); and Declining balance depreciation

Factor

Used only for the declining balance method. This method involves an accelerated depreciation for the beginning years. It is not normally used by schools

Beginning Date

Date to begin calculating depreciation. Usually this is the same as the Acquisition Date.

Original Cost

This field must have the value which is to be depreciated

Life Expectancy

Used to determine the number of years the item is to be depreciated. This is usually set by the appraisal or insurance firm.  These values can also be found in bulletins issued by the Ohio Auditor of State's office.

Salvage Value

Estimated fair value at the end of the item's useful life or the anticipated trade-in value.  When the total depreciation reaches this value, depreciation stops and the asset is considered to be fully depreciated. The salvage value is not required and can be left as zero.

LTD Depreciation

This field is calculated automatically by the system when the open period is closed. It contains the total depreciation from the beginning date up through June 30 of the last fiscal year closed.

Life-to-Date Depreciation Calculation

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Straight-line method is the cost minus estimated salvage value value spread proportionally over the estimated life of the asset. The basic formula for computing straight-line depreciation is:Image Removed

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So if an item has an original cost of $10,000 with an estimated useful life of 5 years and a salvage value of $1,000, it would have an annual (FTD) depreciation of $1800 computed as follows:Image Removed

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End of Year

Original Cost

LTD Depreciation

Book Value at Beginning of FY

Yearly (FTD) Depreciation

Book Value at End of the Fiscal Year

1

10,000

-

10,000

1,800

8,200

2

10,000

1,800

8,200

1,800

6,400

3

10,000

3,600

6,400

1,800

4,600

4

10,000

5,400

4,600

1,800

2,800

5

10,000

7,200

2,800

1,800

1,000

Result

10,000

9,000

1,000

0

1,000

However the Inventory application uses a slightly different calculation from the straight-line method.The total depreciation as of the end of the last fiscal year (called Life-to-date Depreciation) is stored for each item. The system uses the following calculation for annual depreciation. The depreciation for a part of a year will be the annual depreciation pro-rated for the number of months involved.

Image Modified  Image Modified

This formula protects the calculation from being sensitive to changes in original cost, life expectancy, etc. Thus, if an improvement (additional acquisition) is done to an item, the amount of depreciation taken from that point on will reflect the increase or decrease to the original cost. Depreciation already taken in prior years will not be affected.  Listed below are two examples of calculating depreciation for the life of the items. 

Tag #1: $10,000 original cost depreciated over 5 years acquired 01/01/2015 (FY15) with a salvage value of 1000.00.  The item should be completely depreciated in five years.

End of Year

Original Cost

(Total) LTD Depreciation

Salvage Value

Life

Age (years)

Calculation

Yearly LTD Depreciation

1 (2015)

$10,000

$900

$1,000

5

0.5

Image Removed
Image Added

$1,800

2 (2016)

$10,000

$2,700

$1,000

5

1.5

Image Removed
Image Added

$1,800

3 (2017)

$10,000

$4,500

$1,000

5

2.5

Image Removed
Image Added

$1,800

4 (2018)

$10,000

$6,300

$1,000

5

3.5

Image Removed
Image Added

$1,800

5 (2019)

$10,000

$8,100

$1,000

5

4.5

Image Removed
Image Added

$1,800

Result

$10,000

$10,000

$1000

5

5

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Fully Depreciated

Tag #2: $10,000 asset with no salvage value, a beginning depreciation date of 01/01/2015 and an additional acquisition added to the item on 12/01/2017 (FY18).

*NOTE:  Regardless of the DD (day) entered for the beginning depreciation date, depreciation calculates for the full month.

End of Year

Original Cost

(Total) LTD Depreciation

Salvage Value

Life

Age (years)

Calculation

Yearly

Full Year Depreciation Amount

FY Actual Depreciation Added (Pro-Rated)

(Total/End of FY) LTD Depreciation

1 (2015)

$10,000

$1,000

$0

5

0.5

Image Removed
image-20241126-174646.pngImage Added

$2,000

$1,000

$1,000

2 (2016)

$10

,000$3

,000

$0

5

1.5

Image Added
Image Removed

$2,000

$2,000

$3,000

3 (2017)

$10

,000$5

,000

$0

5

2.5

Image Removed
Image Added

$2,000

$2,000

$5,000

2018

During FY18, created additional acquisition against existing tag for $2000.00 thus updating original cost to $12,000.00

4 (2018)

$12,000

$7,800

$0

5

3.5

Image Removed

image-20241126-175308.pngImage Added

$2,800

$2,800

$7,800

5 (2019)

$12,000

$10,600

$0

5

4.5

Image Removed
Image Added

$2,800

Result

$2,800

$12

$10,

000

600

Result

$12,000

$0

5

5

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Image Added

Fully Depreciated

$1,400

$12,000

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Declining Balance Method

The declining-balance method of computing depreciation yields greater than pro rata deductions during the earlier years of life and less than pro rata deductions during the later years. The effect is to reduce the income tax payable in the earlier years and correspondingly increase the amount of funds available to pay for the asset or to increase working capital. Therefore this method of depreciation is not applicable to school districts.

The declining-balance method applies a uniform rate of not more than twice the straight-line rate to the unrecovered basis of the property. Estimated salvage value need not be considered in computing the rate or the base. For example, if the declining-balance method at twice the straight-line rate were applied to a $10,000 asset with an estimated life of 5 years and estimated salvage of $1000, the accelerated rate would be 40% and the initial base against which the rate would be applied would be $10,000. However, an asset may not be depreciated below its estimated salvage value. This method is illustrated in the following table.Image Removed

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The EIS system allows you to enter a "factor", which should be greater than 1 but not greater than 2 to use in calculating declining-balance depreciation. The example above is illustrated using a factor of 2, commonly referred to as the "double-declining balance" method. The formula utilized by EIS to calculate annual depreciation is:


1 Estimated Useful Life
* Factor * Book Value

The annual depreciation will be pro-rated based on the number of months being depreciated to come up with a monthly depreciation amount.

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Tag A's original cost is $5000 depreciated over 5 years.  The yearly depreciation is $1000.  If in year 4, I create an additional acquisition thus updating the original cost to $7000, my yearly depreciation for the remaining life of the asset is now $2000.   It will not disturb prior year depreciation.

Year

Original Cost

Life

Yearly Depreciation

1

$5000

5 years

$1000

2

$5000

5 years

$1000

3

$5000

5 years

$1000

4

$7000

5 years

$2000

5

$7000

5 years

$2000

Running Deprecation Option

If I run depreciate on Tag A, it will recalculate LTD depreciation from scratch using the current original cost of $7000

Year

Original Cost

Life

Yearly Depreciation

1

$7000

5 years

$1400

2

$7000

5 years

$1400

3

$7000

5 years

$1400

4

$7000

5 years

$1400

5

$7000

5 years

$1400

As you can see, the original tracking of depreciation on the life of the asset is altered.

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LTD depreciation field is not modifiable when editing an item in Transactions>Items. If you want to change an item’s existing LTD depreciation to a specific value, you must edit the item and post a Depreciation Transaction.  A Depreciation Transaction can only be created for active items that have not been fully depreciated and can only be created for the current fiscal year.  The amount entered will be added (or subtracted if entering a negative adjustment) to the existing LTD amount.  

  • Internal Type Depreciation Transactions are created when a period is closed.  Internal type depreciation transactions cannot be deleted.  

  • Adjustment Type Depreciation Transactions are created by the user.  It will automatically populate the fiscal year based on the current period.  You must be in that current period in order edit or delete an Adjustment type depreciation transaction.

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