Depreciation — How Asset Value Declines Over Time
Depreciation is the systematic reduction of an asset's book value over its useful life. Learn the methods, tax implications, and why it matters for investors.
Depreciation
Definition
Depreciation is the accounting process of allocating the cost of a tangible fixed asset over its useful life, reflecting the gradual decline in the asset's value due to wear, age, or obsolescence.
How It Works
When a company purchases equipment, a vehicle, or a building, it does not expense the entire cost in the year of purchase. Instead, it spreads the cost across the asset's expected useful life through annual depreciation charges. This matching principle ensures that the expense is recognized in the same periods that the asset generates revenue.
Depreciation Methods
1. Straight-Line Depreciation (Metoda liniowa)
The most common and simplest method. The asset loses equal value each year.
Annual Depreciation = (Cost - Residual Value) / Useful Life
2. Declining Balance (Metoda degresywna)
Accelerated method — higher depreciation in early years, lower in later years. Common factor is 2x (double declining balance).
Annual Depreciation = Book Value at Start of Year x (2 / Useful Life)
3. Units of Production
Based on actual usage rather than time. Common for manufacturing equipment.
Depreciation per Unit = (Cost - Residual Value) / Total Estimated Units
Annual Depreciation = Depreciation per Unit x Units Produced That Year
Polish Tax Depreciation Rules
In Poland, the KSR (Krajowe Standardy Rachunkowości) and tax code define specific depreciation rates for asset categories:
| Asset Category | Tax Depreciation Rate (Annual) |
|---|---|
| Commercial buildings | 2.5% |
| Residential buildings for rent | 1.5% |
| Passenger vehicles | 20% |
| Computers and electronics | 30% |
| Office furniture | 20% |
| Software | 50% |
Polish tax law also allows one-time depreciation (jednorazowa amortyzacja) for small and medium enterprises on assets up to 100,000 PLN per year, accelerating the tax benefit.
Depreciation vs. Amortization
Both spread costs over time, but they apply to different asset types:
- Depreciation — tangible assets (machines, buildings, vehicles)
- Amortization — intangible assets (patents, licenses, goodwill)
In financial statements, they are often combined as D&A (depreciation and amortization).
Example
A Polish e-commerce company purchases a warehouse robot for 200,000 PLN with an estimated useful life of 5 years and a residual value of 20,000 PLN.
Straight-line method:
| Year | Opening Book Value | Depreciation | Closing Book Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 200,000 PLN | 36,000 PLN | 164,000 PLN |
| 2 | 164,000 PLN | 36,000 PLN | 128,000 PLN |
| 3 | 128,000 PLN | 36,000 PLN | 92,000 PLN |
| 4 | 92,000 PLN | 36,000 PLN | 56,000 PLN |
| 5 | 56,000 PLN | 36,000 PLN | 20,000 PLN |
Annual depreciation: (200,000 - 20,000) / 5 = 36,000 PLN
Double declining balance method:
| Year | Opening Book Value | Depreciation | Closing Book Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 200,000 PLN | 80,000 PLN | 120,000 PLN |
| 2 | 120,000 PLN | 48,000 PLN | 72,000 PLN |
| 3 | 72,000 PLN | 28,800 PLN | 43,200 PLN |
| 4 | 43,200 PLN | 17,280 PLN | 25,920 PLN |
| 5 | 25,920 PLN | 5,920 PLN | 20,000 PLN |
The accelerated method front-loads the expense, reducing taxable income more in early years. The total depreciation is the same (180,000 PLN) regardless of method — the difference is timing.
Why It Matters for Investors
Reading Financial Statements
Depreciation is a non-cash expense. The company already spent the money when it bought the asset. The depreciation charge reduces reported earnings but does not reduce cash flow. This is why metrics like EBITDA and free cash flow "add back" depreciation — to show the actual cash-generating ability of the business.
Capital-Intensive vs. Asset-Light Businesses
Companies with heavy capital expenditures (manufacturing, airlines, utilities) carry large depreciation charges that compress their reported earnings. Asset-light businesses (software, consulting) have minimal depreciation. Comparing P/E ratios across these categories without adjusting for depreciation distorts the picture.
Maintenance Capex vs. Growth Capex
When depreciation roughly equals capital expenditures, the company is spending just enough to maintain its existing asset base. When capex significantly exceeds depreciation, the company is investing in growth. When depreciation exceeds capex, the company may be underinvesting — milking existing assets without replacing them.
Tax Shield
Depreciation reduces taxable income without reducing cash. At Poland's 19% CIT rate, every 100,000 PLN in depreciation saves 19,000 PLN in taxes. This "depreciation tax shield" is a real economic benefit and a key consideration in capital budgeting and investment property analysis.
Use Freenance to track your investment portfolio's performance alongside your business assets, giving you a complete picture of your financial position.
Risks and Pitfalls
Earnings Manipulation
Companies can manipulate reported earnings by changing depreciation assumptions. Extending the useful life of an asset reduces annual depreciation, boosting short-term profits while potentially overstating asset values. Watch for unexplained changes in depreciation policies disclosed in the notes to financial statements.
Ignoring Depreciation in Rental Property Analysis
Polish investors in residential rental properties sometimes calculate returns using gross rental income without accounting for the property's depreciation in real economic terms (repairs, renovations needed over time). While accounting depreciation of 1.5% per year on a residential property is a tax benefit, the actual physical depreciation can be much higher.
Overvalued Assets on the Balance Sheet
Just because an asset has a book value of 500,000 PLN does not mean it is worth that amount. Market conditions, technological obsolescence, or physical deterioration can make the real value far less. Impairment testing is supposed to catch this, but it is often delayed.
Confusing Book Value with Market Value
When analyzing stocks, remember that the book value of a company's assets reflects historical cost minus accumulated depreciation — not what those assets could sell for today. This is particularly misleading for real estate, where market values may have appreciated significantly.
FAQ
Does depreciation affect cash flow?
No. Depreciation is a non-cash expense — it appears on the income statement and reduces reported profit, but no money leaves the company's bank account. However, because it reduces taxable income, it indirectly increases cash flow through lower tax payments.
Why do investors care about depreciation if it is non-cash?
Because it affects several key metrics: earnings per share, P/E ratio, return on assets, and return on equity. Investors who focus only on net income without understanding depreciation may misjudge a company's profitability, especially in capital-intensive industries.
What happens when an asset is fully depreciated?
The asset remains on the balance sheet at its residual value but generates no further depreciation expense. If the asset is still in use, the company benefits from zero depreciation charges against the revenue it produces, temporarily boosting profitability. If it is sold, any proceeds above the residual value generate a taxable gain.
Can I depreciate investment property in Poland?
Yes. If you own rental property as a registered business activity (działalność gospodarcza), you can depreciate the building (not the land) at 1.5% per year for residential property or 2.5% for commercial property. This reduces your taxable rental income.
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