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Working out decline in value

General and specific rules for working out the decline in value of depreciating assets.

Published 30 May 2024

UCA general rules for decline in value

UCA contain general rules for working out the decline in value of a depreciating asset, and these rules are covered in this part of the guide.

The general rules don't apply to some depreciating assets. UCA provide specific rules for working out deductions for the assets listed below:

There are also specific rules for working out notional deductions for depreciating assets used in carrying on research and development activities, see Research and development tax incentive schedule instructions 2024.

When does a depreciating asset start to decline in value?

The decline in value of a depreciating asset starts when you first use it, or install it ready for use, for any purpose, including a private purpose. This is known as a depreciating asset’s start time.

Although an asset is treated as declining in value from its start time, a deduction for its decline in value is only allowable to the extent it is used for a taxable purpose, see Definitions for UCA terms.

If you initially use a depreciating asset for a non-taxable purpose, such as for a private purpose, and in later years use it for a taxable purpose, you need to work out the asset’s decline in value from its start time, including the years you used it for a private purpose. You can then work out your deductions for the decline in value of the asset for the years you used it for a taxable purpose, see Decline in value of a depreciating asset used for a non-taxable purpose.

Depreciation incentives

In 2020, the government introduced temporary tax incentives to help Australian businesses withstand the impacts of COVID-19. One of these temporary tax incentives was temporary full expensing. Temporary full expensing ended on 30 June 2023.

For information on which of the depreciation incentives may apply to an asset in earlier income years, see Interaction of tax depreciation incentives.

Methods of working out decline in value

You generally have the choice of 2 methods to work out the decline in value of a depreciating asset. These are:

Both these methods are based on a depreciating asset’s effective life. The rules for working out an asset’s effective life are explained in Effective life of a depreciating asset.

You can generally choose to use either method for each depreciating asset you hold. However, once you have chosen a method for a particular asset, you can't change to the other method for that asset.

The Depreciation and capital allowances tool will help you with the choice and the calculations.

If you are not carrying on a business, you may be able to claim an immediate deduction for certain depreciating assets that cost $300 or less, see Immediate deduction for certain non-business depreciating assets (costing $300 or less).

In other cases, you don't have a choice of which method you use to work out the decline in value. These cases are:

By working out the decline in value you determine the adjustable value of a depreciating asset. A depreciating asset’s adjustable value at a particular time is its cost (first and second elements) less any decline in value up to that time. See Cost of a depreciating asset for information on first and second elements of cost. The opening adjustable value of an asset for an income year is generally the same as its adjustable value at the end of the previous income year.

You calculate the decline in value and adjustable value of a depreciating asset from the asset’s start time independently of your use of the depreciating asset for a taxable purpose. However, your deduction for the decline in value is reduced by the extent that your use of the asset is for a non-taxable purpose, see Decline in value of a depreciating asset used for a non-taxable purpose. Your deduction may also be reduced if the depreciating asset is a leisure facility or boat even though the asset is used, or installed ready for use, for a taxable purpose, see Decline in value of leisure facilities and Decline in value of boats.

The diminishing value method

The diminishing value method:

  • assumes the decline in value each income year is a constant percentage of the base value each year for the effective life of the asset, and
  • produces a progressively smaller decline in the item’s value over time.

Did you hold the depreciating asset before 10 May 2006?

Yes: For depreciating assets you held before 10 May 2006, the formula for the decline in value is:

base value × (days held ÷ 365) × (150% ÷ asset's effective life).

Use this formula for any asset you held before 10 May 2006, even if you disposed of it and reacquired it on or after 10 May 2006.

No: For depreciating assets you started to hold on or after 10 May 2006, the formula for the decline in value is:

base value × (days held ÷ 365) × (200% ÷ asset's effective life).

The base value:

  • for the income year in which an asset’s start time occurs, is the asset’s cost
  • for a later income year, is    
    • the asset’s opening adjustable value for that year, plus
    • any amount included in the asset’s second element of cost for that year.

Days held is the number of days you held the asset in the income year in which:

  • you used it, or
  • you had it installed ready for use for any purpose.

Days held can be 366 for a leap year, even though the denominator remains 365.

For information on balancing adjustment events, see What happens if you no longer hold or use a depreciating asset?.

You can't use the diminishing value method to work out the decline in value of:

  • in-house software
  • an item of intellectual property (except copyright in a film)
  • a spectrum licence, or
  • a telecommunications site access right.

Example: an asset’s base value for its first and its second income years ignoring any GST impact

Leo purchased a computer for $4,000. The computer’s base value in its first income year, which is when the computer is first used, is its cost of $4,000. If the computer’s decline in value for that first income year is $1,000, and no amounts are included in the second element of the computer’s cost, its base value for the second income year is its opening adjustable value of $3,000, that is, the cost of the computer ($4,000) less its decline in value ($1,000).

If Leo purchased the computer halfway through the income year then the calculation for the decline in value is $1,000 × 182 ÷ 365 = $499 and its base value for the second income year is $4,000 − $499 = $3,501.

End of example

 

Example: diminishing value method, ignoring any GST impact

Laura purchased a photocopier on 1 July 2023 for $1,500 and she started using it that day. It has an effective life of 5 years.

Laura chose to use the diminishing value method to work out the decline in value of the photocopier. The decline in value for 2023–24 is $602 worked out as follows:

1,500 × (366 ÷ 365) × (200% ÷ 5)

If Laura used the photocopier wholly for taxable purposes in 2023–24, she is entitled to a deduction equal to the decline in value. The adjustable value of the asset on 30 June 2024 is $898. This is the cost of the asset ($1,500) less its decline in value to 30 June 2024 ($602).

End of example

The prime cost method

The prime cost method:

  • assumes the value of a depreciating asset decreases constantly over its effective life, and
  • produces a consistent decline in the item’s value over time.

The formula for the annual decline in value using the prime cost method is:

asset's cost × (days held ÷ 365) × (100% ÷ asset's effective life)

The value of the asset's cost decreases every year by a constant amount. That constant amount is the actual cost divided by the number of years of effective life. In the first year, the value of the asset's cost is the actual cost of the asset.

If your asset cost $2,000 and has an effective life of 5 years, you can claim one fifth, 20%, of its cost, that is $400, in each of the 5 years, if you held the asset for the whole income year.

Days held is the number of days you held the asset in the income year in which:

  • you used it, or
  • you had it installed ready for use for any purpose.

Days held can be 366 for a leap year, even though the denominator remains 365.

For information on balancing adjustment events, such as the start and end dates, see What happens if you no longer hold or use a depreciating asset?

Example: prime cost method, ignoring any GST impact

Laura purchased a photocopier on 1 July 2023 for $1,500 and she started using it that day. It has an effective life of 5 years.

Laura chose to use the prime cost method to work out the decline in value of the photocopier. The decline in value for 2023–24 is $301 worked out as follows:

$1,500 × (366 ÷ 365) × (100% ÷ 5)

If Laura used the photocopier wholly for taxable purposes in 2023–24, she is entitled to a deduction equal to the decline in value. The adjustable value of the asset at 30 June 2024 is $1,199.

End of example

If there has been rollover relief and the transferor used the prime cost method to work out the asset’s decline in value, the transferee should replace the asset’s effective life in the prime cost formula with the asset’s remaining effective life, that is, any period of the asset’s effective life that is yet to elapse when the transferor stopped holding the asset, see Rollover relief.

An adjusted prime cost formula must be used if any of the following occurs:

  • you recalculate the effective life of an asset, see Effective life of a depreciating asset
  • an amount is included in the second element of an asset’s cost in an income year after the initial income year in which the asset’s start time occurs, see Cost of a depreciating asset
  • an asset’s opening adjustable value is reduced by a debt forgiveness amount, see Commercial debt forgiveness
  • you reduced the opening adjustable value of a depreciating asset that is the replacement asset for an asset subject to an involuntary disposal, see Involuntary disposal of a depreciating asset
  • an asset’s opening adjustable value is modified due to GST increasing or decreasing adjustments, input tax credits for the acquisition or importation of the asset, or input tax credits for amounts included in the second element of cost of an asset, see GST input tax credits, or
  • an asset’s opening adjustable value is modified due to forex realisation gains or forex realisation losses, see Foreign currency gains and losses.

You must use the adjusted prime cost formula for the income year in which any of these changes are made (the ‘change year’) and later years. Where the asset's remaining effective life is any period of its effective life that is yet to elapse either at the start of the change year or, in the case of roll-over relief, when the balancing adjustment event occurs for the transferor, the formula for the decline in value is:

opening adjustable value for the change year plus any second element cost amounts for that year × (days held ÷ 365) × (100% ÷ asset's remaining effective life)

The prime cost formula must also be adjusted for certain intangible depreciating assets you acquire from a former holder, see Effective life of intangible depreciating assets.

Decline in value of a depreciating asset used for a non-taxable purpose

You calculate the decline in value and adjustable value of a depreciating asset from the start time independently of your use of the depreciating asset for a taxable purpose. However, you reduce your deduction for the decline in value by the extent that your use of the asset is for a non-taxable purpose.

If you initially use an asset for a non-taxable purpose, such as for a private purpose, and in later years use it for a taxable purpose, you need to work out the asset’s decline in value from its start time including the years you used it for a private purpose. You can then work out your deductions for the decline in value of the asset for the years you used it for a taxable purpose.

Example: depreciating asset used partly for a taxable purpose, ignoring any GST impact

Leo bought a computer for $6,000 on 2 July 2023. He only used it for a taxable purpose 50% of the time during 2023–24.

If the computer’s decline in value for 2023–24 is $1,500, Leo’s deduction is reduced to $750, that is, 50% of the computer’s decline in value for 2023–24.

The adjustable value on 30 June 2024 is $4,500 (that is, $6,000 − $1,500), irrespective of the extent of Leo’s use of the computer for taxable purpose.

End of example

 

Example: depreciating asset initially used for a non-taxable purpose

Paul purchased a refrigerator on 1 July 2020 for $2,000 and immediately used it wholly for private purposes. He started a new business on 1 March 2024 and then used the refrigerator wholly in his business. Paul’s refrigerator started to decline in value from 1 July 2020 as that was the day he first used it. He needs to work out the refrigerator’s decline in value from that date. However, Paul can only claim a deduction for the decline in value for the period commencing 1 March 2024 when he used the refrigerator for a taxable purpose.

Paul chooses to use the prime cost method to work out the decline in value and adopts the Commissioner’s determination of effective life for a refrigerator (10 years).

The decline in value of the refrigerator will be:

2020–21:  $2,000 × (365 days ÷ 365 days) × (100% ÷ 10 years) = $200

2021–22:  $2,000 × (365 days ÷ 365 days) × (100% ÷ 10 years) = $200  

2022–23:  $2,000 × (365 days ÷ 365 days) × (100% ÷ 10 years) = $200

2023–24:  $2,000 × (366 days ÷ 365 days) × (100% ÷ 10 years) = $201

Although the refrigerator has declined in value since Paul started using it on 1 July 2020, a deduction for the decline in value is reduced by the extent it was not used for a taxable purpose. No deduction is available for 2020–21, 2021–22, 2022–23 as Paul used the refrigerator for private purposes. The 2023–24 deduction is reduced by 244 days (1 July 2023 to 29 February 2024).

  (244 days ÷ 366 days) × $201 = $134

   $201 − $134 = $67

For 2023–24 Paul will have a deduction of $67 for the decline in value for the refrigerator.

End of example

Decline in value of leisure facilities

Your deduction for the decline in value of a leisure facility may be reduced even though you use it, or install it ready for use, for a taxable purpose. Your deduction is limited to the extent that:

  • the asset’s use is a fringe benefit, or
  • the leisure facility is used (or held for use) mainly in the ordinary course of your business of providing leisure facilities for payment, to produce your assessable income in the nature of rents or similar charges, or for your employees’ use or the care of their children.

Decline in value of boats

The total amount you can claim as a deduction for the decline in value of a boat that you use or hold can't exceed your assessable income from using or holding that boat in 2023–24. If the total amount of your deduction exceeds the relevant assessable income, we reduce the deduction by the amount of the excess.

Exceptions to that reduction are:

  • holding a boat as your trading stock
  • using a boat (or holding it) mainly for letting it on hire in the ordinary course of a business that you carry on
  • using a boat (or holding it) mainly for transporting the public or goods for payment in the ordinary course of a business that you carry on, or
  • using a boat for a purpose that is essential to the efficient conduct of a business that you carry on.

Depreciating asset acquired from an associate

If you acquired a depreciating asset from an associate, such as a relative or partner, and the associate has claimed or can claim deductions for the decline in value of the asset, you must use the same method of working out the decline in value that the associate used.

If the associate used the diminishing value method, you must use the same effective life that they used. If they used the prime cost method, you must use any remaining period of the effective life used by them.

You must recalculate the effective life of the depreciating asset if the asset’s cost increases by 10% or more in any income year, including the year in which you start to hold it, see How to recalculate effective life.

You can require the associate to tell you the method and effective life they used by serving a notice on them within 60 days after you acquire the asset. Penalties can be imposed if the associate intentionally refuses or fails to comply with the notice.

Sale and leaseback arrangements

If you acquired a depreciating asset but the user of the asset does not change or is an associate of the former user, such as under a sale and leaseback arrangement, you must use the same method of working out the decline in value that the former holder used.

If the former holder used the diminishing value method, you must use the effective life that they used. If they used the prime cost method, you must use any remaining period of the effective life used by them. If you can't readily ascertain the method that the former holder used or if they did not use a method, you must use the diminishing value method. You must use an effective life determined by the Commissioner if you can't find out the effective life that the former holder used or if they did not use an effective life.

You must recalculate the effective life of the depreciating asset if the asset’s cost increases by 10% or more in any income year, including the year in which you start to hold it, see How to recalculate effective life.

Continue to: Immediate deduction for certain non-business depreciating assets

Return to: Depreciating assets effective life, cost and decline in value

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