Depreciation Calculator

Calculate asset depreciation using straight-line, declining balance, and other methods. Plan for tax deductions.

Estimated value at end of useful life

Free Depreciation Calculator: Calculate Asset Depreciation for Taxes

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Comprehensive Guide to Asset Depreciation

Depreciation is the systematic allocation of an asset's cost over its useful life, recognizing that assets lose value as they age. For businesses and self-employed individuals, depreciation deductions can reduce taxable income significantly—sometimes saving thousands in taxes annually. Understanding depreciation is critical for tax planning, financial reporting accuracy, and making informed decisions about asset purchases.

The IRS requires businesses to depreciate tangible assets (equipment, vehicles, buildings) using approved methods. Different depreciation methods—straight-line, declining balance, sum-of-years—produce different tax deductions over time. Additionally, special rules like Section 179 and bonus depreciation allow businesses to deduct or accelerate the write-off of equipment purchases, creating powerful cash flow and tax planning opportunities.

How to Use the Depreciation Calculator

Our depreciation calculator helps you calculate depreciation schedules:

  1. Enter Asset Information

    • Asset name and description
    • Original cost (purchase price)
    • Salvage value (estimated value at end of life)
    • Useful life (years you expect to use the asset)
  2. Select Depreciation Method

    • Straight-line (equal depreciation each year)
    • Declining balance (accelerated, higher early years)
    • Sum-of-years' digits (moderate acceleration)
    • Units of production (based on usage)
  3. Choose Tax Treatment

    • Standard MACRS (IRS requirement for most assets)
    • Section 179 (immediate expensing option)
    • Bonus depreciation (accelerated deduction)
  4. View Depreciation Schedule

    • Year-by-year depreciation deductions
    • Book value each year
    • Cumulative depreciation
    • Tax savings at your tax bracket

Depreciation Formulas

Straight-Line Depreciation

Annual Depreciation = (Cost - Salvage Value) / Useful Life

Example: $50,000 equipment, $5,000 salvage, 5-year life Annual Depreciation = ($50,000 - $5,000) / 5 = $9,000/year

Schedule:

  • Year 1: $9,000 depreciation, Book value: $41,000
  • Year 2: $9,000 depreciation, Book value: $32,000
  • Year 3: $9,000 depreciation, Book value: $23,000
  • Year 4: $9,000 depreciation, Book value: $14,000
  • Year 5: $9,000 depreciation, Book value: $5,000

Declining Balance (Double Declining Balance)

Rate = (1 / Useful Life) × Multiplier (200% for double declining)
Annual Depreciation = Book Value × Rate

Example: Same $50,000 equipment, 5-year life, 200% declining balance Rate = (1/5) × 200% = 40% per year

Schedule:

  • Year 1: $50,000 × 40% = $20,000, Book value: $30,000
  • Year 2: $30,000 × 40% = $12,000, Book value: $18,000
  • Year 3: $18,000 × 40% = $7,200, Book value: $10,800
  • Year 4: $10,800 × 40% = $4,320, Book value: $6,480
  • Year 5: $6,480 × 40% = $2,592, Book value: $3,888

Note: Often switches to straight-line in later years when straight-line becomes higher.

Sum-of-Years' Digits

Sum of Years = 1 + 2 + 3 + ... + Useful Life
Annual Depreciation = (Remaining Years / Sum of Years) × Depreciable Amount

Example: $50,000 equipment, $5,000 salvage, 5-year life Sum of Years = 1+2+3+4+5 = 15 Depreciable amount = $50,000 - $5,000 = $45,000

Schedule:

  • Year 1: (5/15) × $45,000 = $15,000, Book value: $35,000
  • Year 2: (4/15) × $45,000 = $12,000, Book value: $23,000
  • Year 3: (3/15) × $45,000 = $9,000, Book value: $14,000
  • Year 4: (2/15) × $45,000 = $6,000, Book value: $8,000
  • Year 5: (1/15) × $45,000 = $3,000, Book value: $5,000

Tax Savings Calculation

Annual Tax Savings = Annual Depreciation × Tax Bracket

Example: $9,000 annual depreciation, 25% tax bracket Tax Savings = $9,000 × 0.25 = $2,250/year

Practical Depreciation Examples

Example 1: Straight-Line Depreciation for Equipment

Scenario: Small manufacturer buys machinery

Asset Details:

  • Equipment cost: $100,000
  • Salvage value: $10,000
  • Useful life: 10 years
  • Tax bracket: 25%

Straight-Line Depreciation: Annual depreciation = ($100,000 - $10,000) / 10 = $9,000/year Annual tax savings = $9,000 × 25% = $2,250/year Total tax savings over 10 years = $22,500

10-Year Schedule:

  • Year 1: Deduction $9,000, Book value $91,000
  • Year 5: Deduction $9,000, Book value $55,000
  • Year 10: Deduction $9,000, Book value $10,000 (salvage value)

Example 2: Accelerated Depreciation (Double Declining Balance)

Scenario: Technology company buys computers and servers

Asset Details:

  • Equipment cost: $80,000
  • Salvage value: $0 (tech becomes obsolete)
  • Useful life: 5 years
  • Tax bracket: 32%

Double Declining Balance: Rate = (1/5) × 200% = 40%

Schedule:

  • Year 1: $80,000 × 40% = $32,000 deduction, Tax savings = $10,240
  • Year 2: $48,000 × 40% = $19,200 deduction, Tax savings = $6,144
  • Year 3: $28,800 × 40% = $11,520 deduction, Tax savings = $3,686
  • Year 4: $17,280 × 40% = $6,912 deduction, Tax savings = $2,212
  • Year 5: $10,368 × 40% = $4,147 deduction, Tax savings = $1,327

5-Year Totals:

  • Total depreciation: $73,779 (didn't fully depreciate due to method)
  • Total tax savings: $23,609

Comparison to Straight-Line:

  • Straight-line: $16,000/year × 32% = $5,120/year tax savings
  • Accelerated: Front-loaded savings ($10,240 in Year 1 vs. $5,120)
  • Advantage accelerated: Get larger tax deductions earlier when cash flow matters

Example 3: MACRS Depreciation (Real-World IRS Method)

Scenario: Business purchases a delivery van

Asset Details:

  • Van cost: $45,000
  • MACRS category: 5-year property (vehicles)
  • Using 200% declining balance with half-year convention
  • Tax bracket: 24%

MACRS 5-Year Schedule (using IRS percentages):

  • Year 1: $45,000 × 20% = $9,000, Tax savings = $2,160
  • Year 2: $45,000 × 32% = $14,400, Tax savings = $3,456
  • Year 3: $45,000 × 19.2% = $8,640, Tax savings = $2,074
  • Year 4: $45,000 × 11.52% = $5,184, Tax savings = $1,244
  • Year 5: $45,000 × 11.52% = $5,184, Tax savings = $1,244
  • Year 6: $45,000 × 5.76% = $2,592, Tax savings = $622

Total: $45,000 fully depreciated over 6 years Total tax savings: $10,800 (24% of $45,000)

Key difference from other methods: MACRS uses IRS-prescribed percentages and is required for tax reporting.

Example 4: Section 179 vs. Regular Depreciation

Scenario: Contractor needs to decide how to treat $150,000 equipment purchase

Option A: Regular Depreciation (MACRS 5-year)

  • Year 1: MACRS = ~$30,000 deduction
  • Years 2-6: Additional MACRS deductions
  • Total tax savings over 6 years: $36,000 (24% bracket)

Option B: Section 179 Immediate Expensing

  • Year 1: Deduct full $150,000 as Section 179
  • Year 1 tax savings: $150,000 × 24% = $36,000 immediately
  • Years 2-6: No additional deductions

Comparison:

  • Same total tax savings ($36,000)
  • BUT Section 179 gets all savings Year 1
  • If you need cash flow: Section 179 is powerful
  • Requirement: Must have at least $150,000 taxable business income

Limits (2024):

  • Annual limit: $1,220,000
  • Total purchases threshold: $3,050,000 (above this, limit phases out)

Example 5: Bonus Depreciation Strategy

Scenario: Manufacturing facility invests in new equipment during economic stimulus period

Asset Details:

  • Equipment cost: $500,000
  • Eligible for 100% bonus depreciation (stimulus year)
  • Tax bracket: 25%

Bonus Depreciation (100% allowance):

  • Year 1: Deduct full $500,000 as bonus depreciation
  • Year 1 tax savings: $500,000 × 25% = $125,000 immediately

Comparison to regular MACRS (7-year):

  • MACRS Year 1 (~$71,000): Tax savings = $17,750
  • Bonus Year 1 ($500,000): Tax savings = $125,000
  • Difference: $107,250 in accelerated tax savings

Cash Flow Impact: $125,000 tax savings in Year 1 dramatically improves cash flow for business reinvestment or operations.

Key Depreciation Concepts

Depreciable Assets vs. Non-Depreciable

Depreciable Assets:

  • Equipment, machinery, tools
  • Vehicles for business use
  • Buildings and improvements (not land)
  • Computers and technology
  • Furniture and fixtures
  • Cost >$2,500 (typical capitalization threshold)

Non-Depreciable Assets:

  • Land (appreciated, not depreciated)
  • Inventory (expensed when sold)
  • Intangible assets (may be amortized)
  • Assets held for personal use

Depreciation Methods Comparison

Method Year 1 Deduction (Example) Best Use Tax Impact
Straight-Line Equal each year Buildings, furniture Even deductions
Double Declining Balance High early years Technology, vehicles Front-loaded savings
Sum-of-Years' High early, declining Moderate acceleration Balanced acceleration
Units of Production Based on usage High-use equipment Matches usage pattern
MACRS (IRS) Per IRS tables All business assets (required) Prescribed by IRS

Section 179 Deduction Benefits

Section 179 Advantages:

  • Immediate full deduction (instead of multi-year depreciation)
  • Massive tax savings in year of purchase
  • Improves cash flow when business needs it most
  • Up to $1,220,000 limit (2024)

Section 179 Limitations:

  • Can only deduct against business income (can't create net loss)
  • Phases out if total purchases exceed $3,050,000
  • Property must be for business use
  • Consult tax professional for carryforward options

Bonus Depreciation Trends

Bonus depreciation provides additional first-year deductions beyond Section 179. Rates vary by year and are set by Congress:

  • 100% bonus (recent years): Full cost deductible Year 1
  • Phasing down: Percentage decreases over time
  • Strategic planning: Time major purchases for high-bonus years

Example Impact: 100% bonus depreciation can turn a marginal equipment investment into highly tax-efficient decision.

Book Value vs. Tax Basis

Book Value: The value shown on financial statements

  • Calculated using depreciation method chosen for accounting
  • Used for balance sheet and financial reporting
  • May differ from tax basis

Tax Basis: The value used for IRS tax depreciation

  • Calculated using MACRS or other IRS-approved methods
  • May be different from book value
  • Tracked separately for tax compliance

Important: A business might show $50,000 book value while IRS basis is $0 (fully depreciated) or $75,000 (different depreciation method).

Depreciation and Recapture

Depreciation Recapture on Sale

When you sell depreciated property, you "recapture" depreciation:

  • Depreciation taken = Taxable gain at sale
  • Example: Bought equipment for $100,000, depreciated to $50,000 book value, sold for $60,000
  • Gain = $60,000 - $50,000 = $10,000
  • Portion attributable to depreciation recaptured as income

Tax Rate on Recapture

  • Depreciation recapture taxed at 25% (fixed rate)
  • Additional gain above recapture taxed at capital gains rates (0%, 15%, or 20%)
  • Example: Above scenario
    • Depreciation recapture: $10,000 × 25% = $2,500 tax
    • Preferential vs. ordinary income (can be significant)

Depreciation Planning Strategies

Strategy 1: Accelerate Deductions (Section 179 + Bonus)

  • Use Section 179 and bonus depreciation when possible
  • Front-load tax deductions in high-income years
  • Improves Year 1 cash flow

Strategy 2: Match Useful Lives to Reality

  • Technology: 3-5 years (becomes obsolete)
  • Vehicles: 5-7 years (typical useful life)
  • Buildings: 27.5-39 years (very long useful life)
  • Matching reality to IRS categories optimizes deductions

Strategy 3: Timing of Purchases

  • Buy before year-end to capture depreciation deductions that year
  • Timing matters for Section 179 (limited annually)
  • Plan multi-year purchases to stay under $3,050,000 threshold

Strategy 4: Tax Rate Optimization

  • Claim depreciation when in high tax brackets (bigger savings)
  • Defer if expecting higher bracket next year (sometimes)
  • Coordinate with business income timing

Common Depreciation Mistakes

  1. Not Separating Land and Building – Land doesn't depreciate; building does
  2. Depreciating Personal Assets – Home, car for personal use can't be depreciated
  3. Missing Section 179 Opportunity – Leaving $100,000+ tax savings on table
  4. Incorrect Useful Life – Choosing wrong asset class affects deductions
  5. Forgetting Salvage Value – Changes depreciable base for some methods
  6. Mixing Methods – Using different methods without clear business purpose
  7. Not Tracking Basis – Losing documentation for audit defense
  8. Forgetting Recapture – Being surprised by taxes on sale of depreciated asset
  9. Assuming Accelerated Always Better – Sometimes straight-line better for cash flow
  10. Not Consulting Tax Pro – Missing complex strategies like cost segregation
Depreciation is the systematic allocation of an asset's cost over its useful life. Businesses deduct depreciation from taxable income, recognizing that assets lose value as they age and get used. For example, a $50,000 truck depreciates (loses value) over 5 years, allowing the business to deduct ~$10,000/year in depreciation expense, reducing taxable income and taxes owed. Depreciation is a tax deduction that doesn't involve actual cash outflow—making it powerful for tax planning. Tangible business assets with useful lives greater than 1 year can typically be depreciated: vehicles, equipment, machinery, tools, computers, buildings/improvements (not land), furniture. The asset must be: (1) Used in business or income-producing activity, (2) Has determinable useful life, (3) Cost more than capitalization threshold ($2,500-$5,000 typical). Personal-use assets (your home, personal vehicle) cannot be depreciated. Land never depreciates. **Straight-line:** Equal deduction each year. Example: $9,000/year for 5 years. Simple, predictable. **Accelerated:** Higher deductions in early years, lower later. Example: $20,000 Year 1, then declining. Accelerated gives bigger tax savings early when cash flow matters, but same total deductions over asset life. For tax planning, accelerated is often better (get savings sooner). Choose based on business cash flow needs and tax situation. Section 179 allows you to immediately deduct (expense) up to $1,220,000 (2024) of business equipment purchases in the year bought, instead of depreciating over years. Massive tax advantage: Instead of $9,000/year deduction, deduct $45,000 Year 1. Tax savings: $45,000 × 25% = $11,250 in Year 1 (vs. $2,250/year without Section 179). Limitation: Can only deduct against business income (can't create net loss). Ideal for: Profitable businesses buying equipment. Depreciation is a **non-cash expense**—you deduct it on taxes without spending cash that year. This creates tax benefits without cash outflow. Example: Buy $50,000 equipment, deduct $9,000 Year 1 depreciation (save $2,250 in taxes), but no cash paid—you already paid the $50,000 at purchase. This makes depreciation very tax-efficient. However, eventually you may need to replace the asset (real cash outflow), so depreciation deduction helps offset that future expense. When you sell a depreciated asset, depreciation is "recaptured"—taxed as ordinary income at up to 25% rate. Example: Bought equipment for $100,000, depreciated to $50,000 book value, sold for $75,000. Gain = $25,000. Portion attributable to depreciation ($25,000 all depreciation) recaptured at 25% = $6,250 tax. Portion above basis taxed at capital gains rates (0%, 15%, 20%). The higher the depreciation taken, the higher the recapture tax—important to consider. Yes, if eligible. Bonus depreciation (100% in recent years, phasing down) allows you to deduct a larger percentage of qualifying property in Year 1, before regular depreciation. Works with Section 179 to maximize Year 1 deductions. Example: $100,000 equipment with 100% bonus = deduct full $100,000 Year 1 (tax savings ~$25,000). Rates change yearly per Congress, so strategy depends on current year's rate. Consult tax professional for current rates. MACRS (Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System) is the IRS-required depreciation method for most business assets. You don't have a choice—you must use MACRS for tax purposes (though you can use different method for financial reporting). MACRS assigns each asset type to a recovery period (3, 5, 7, 15, 27.5, or 39 years) and provides IRS percentages for each year. Example: Trucks = 5-year property, Buildings = 39-year property. MACRS is accelerated (larger deductions early than straight-line) and includes half-year convention (assumes mid-year purchase).

Disclaimer: This depreciation calculator provides estimates for educational purposes. Actual tax depreciation must follow IRS rules including MACRS, Section 179, bonus depreciation, and asset classification. Tax laws change frequently. This calculator cannot account for all factors (cost segregation, Section 1245 property, qualified leasehold property, etc.). Consult a tax professional, CPA, or certified tax accountant for tax planning and compliance. This calculator should not be used for official tax reporting without professional verification.