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Definition · accounting fundamentals

Depreciation

Depreciation is allocating the cost of a tangible asset over its useful life as a periodic expense. For depreciation, the important details are the accounting period, source evidence, reviewer, materiality threshold, and control purpose that make the treatment auditable during close, reporting, and later review.

Also known as asset depreciation, depreciation expense

Written by Pluvo TeamReviewed by Pluvo Team
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Why it matters

Understanding depreciation matters because close, reconciliation, and audit work depend on consistent timing, source evidence, review thresholds, and ownership. A loose definition creates avoidable rework. When the term is tied to a source system, owner, and review cadence, it becomes easier to audit assumptions, catch changes early, and keep operators aligned.

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In practice

  • Close example

    Teams use depreciation during close, review, or audit support when a balance or transaction needs evidence. The controller should be able to trace the number to source records, timing, reviewer, and control threshold.

  • Review example

    Depreciation should be reviewed whenever the source system, calculation logic, time period, or decision owner changes. That keeps the definition useful instead of letting it drift into a label.

In practice, teams should define depreciation with a clear source, owner, time period, and decision before they use it in reporting, planning, or operating reviews.

Understanding depreciation matters because close, reconciliation, and audit work depend on consistent timing, source evidence, review thresholds, and ownership. A loose definition creates avoidable rework. When the term is tied to a source system, owner, and review cadence, it becomes easier to audit assumptions, catch changes early, and keep operators aligned.

A strong workflow for depreciation separates the definition from the action: first agree what the term means, then decide how it is measured, when it changes, and who is accountable for the next step.

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FAQ

What is depreciation?

Depreciation is allocating the cost of a tangible asset over its useful life as a periodic expense. For depreciation, the important details are the accounting period, source evidence, reviewer, materiality threshold, and control purpose that make the treatment auditable during close, reporting, and later review.

What is the difference between depreciation and amortization?

The boundary for depreciation differs from related terms by scope, source data, time period, and decision use. In this glossary, it covers allocating the cost of a tangible asset over its useful life as a periodic expense, so teams should compare those boundaries before using it in reporting or planning.

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Sources

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