Depreciation is used to allocate the cost of fixed assets, such as machinery and equipment, over their depreciable life. For each fixed asset, you must define how it will be depreciated.
There are two ways to post depreciation:
Business Central can calculate daily depreciation, which allows you to calculate depreciation for any period. You can therefore analyze current operating results on, for example, a monthly, quarterly, or annual basis. The calculation uses a standard year of 360 days and a standard month of 30 days. For more information, see Depreciation Methods.
If several departments use a fixed asset, periodic depreciation can be automatically allocated to these departments according to a user-defined allocation table.
You can cancel incorrect depreciation entries by using the Cancel FA Ledger Entries batch job. Afterward, you can post the correct amount by running the Calculate Depreciation batch job again. The errors you correct are posted as fixed asset error ledger entries.
Indexation is used to adjust values for general price-level changes. You can use the Index Fixed Assets batch job to recalculate the depreciation amounts.
Once a month, or whenever you choose, you can run the Calculate Depreciation batch job. The batch job ignores fixed assets that have been sold, are blocked or inactive, or use the manual depreciation method.
Choose the icon, enter Calculate Depreciation, and then choose the related link.
Fill in the fields as necessary. Hover over a field to read a short description.
Choose the OK button.
The batch job calculates the depreciation and creates lines in the fixed asset G/L journal.
Choose the icon, enter FA G/L Journals, and then choose the related link.
On the Fixed Asset G/L Journal page, in the No. of Depreciation Days field, you can see how many days of depreciation have been calculated.
Choose the Post action.
Note
Known limitation: If you set the Use Force No. of Days field to Yes, and the Force No. of Days field is set to a value where Posting Date minus Number of Days results in a date in the previous calendar year, the system will not let you post the depreciation. You can avoid it by reducing the Force No. of Days field to no more than than the calculated days until posting date using 30days/month OR set the flag Fiscal Year 365 Days in the Depreciation Book. We recommend the first option as you may not want to change the use of 30days/months for depreciation. For more information, see Fiscal Year 365 Days Field Depreciation.
The Book Value field on the Fixed Asset Card page is updated accordingly.
If you have set up fixed asset allocation keys to allocate amounts to different departments or projects, the amounts are allocated during posting. For more information, see Set Up General Fixed Assets Information.
In the Ending Book Value field on the FA Depreciation Books page, you can specify the book value that you want your fixed asset to have in the current depreciation book after it has been fully depreciated. You can do this manually or you can fill in the Default Ending Book Value field on the related Depreciation Book page, which will then be used to automatically fill the field.
Note
If the last depreciation means that the Book Value field on the Fixed Asset Card page is zero, the last depreciation is automatically reduced by this amount.
If the value in the Book Value field is greater than zero after the last depreciation, for example because of a rounding problem or because a salvage value exists, the value in the Ending Book Value field on the FA Depreciation Books page is ignored. For more information, see To post the salvage value together with the acquisition cost.
If a fixed asset is used by several departments, periodic depreciation can be automatically allocated to these departments according to a user-defined allocation table.
When you fill in journal lines to post to a depreciation book, you can duplicate the lines in a separate journal so you can post to a different depreciation book. For more information, see To post entries to different depreciation books.
Important
If you have selected the Use Duplication List field, do not use number series on the journal. The reason is that the number series for the fixed asset G/L journal does not the number series for the fixed asset journal.
Choose the icon, enter Fixed Asset G/L Journal, and then choose the related link.
In the journal that you want to post depreciation with, select the Use Duplication List check box.
Fill in the remaining fields as necessary.
Choose the Post action.
Choose the icon, enter FA Journals, and then choose the related link.
Note
The Fixed Asset Journal page contains new lines for different depreciation books according to the duplication list.
Review or edit the lines, and then choose the Post action.
Note
Another way to duplicate an entry in a separate book is to enter a depreciation book code in the Duplicate in Depreciation Book field when you fill in a journal line.
You can copy entries from one depreciation book to another by using the Copy Depreciation Book batch job. The batch job creates journal lines in the journal batch that you have specified on the FA Journal Setup page for the depreciation book that you want to copy to. For more information, see the following procedure.
The copied lines are created in either the fixed asset G/L journal or the fixed asset journal, depending on whether the depreciation book that you are copying has integration to the general ledger.