Rate Chart of Depreciation of Fixed Assets

Rate Chart of Depreciation of Fixed Assets - Educational Resource

Rate Chart of Depreciation of Fixed Assets

As per Income Tax Act, 1961 & Companies Act, 2013

Assessment Year 2025-26

⚠️ Educational Disclaimer: This resource is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Please consult with a qualified Chartered Accountant or tax professional for specific cases.

πŸ“‹ Overview of Depreciation

What is Depreciation?

Depreciation is the systematic allocation of the depreciable amount of an asset over its useful life. It represents the reduction in value of a fixed asset due to wear and tear, obsolescence, or passage of time.

Two Main Regimes in India

1. Income Tax Act, 1961 (Section 32): Governs depreciation for tax purposes

2. Companies Act, 2013 (Schedule II): Governs depreciation for financial reporting

Methods of Depreciation

Written Down Value (WDV) Method: Depreciation is calculated on the reducing balance of the asset

Straight Line Method (SLM): Depreciation is calculated on the original cost uniformly over the useful life

πŸ’Ό Depreciation Rates as per Income Tax Act, 1961

Legal Framework

Section 32 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, read with Rule 5 and the New Appendix I of the Income-tax Rules, 1962 (applicable from A.Y. 2018-19 onwards).

Method: Depreciation is on Written Down Value (WDV) basis, except for undertakings engaged in generation or generation & distribution of power (where SLM is allowed).

πŸ“Š Depreciation Rate Chart - Income Tax Act, 1961

S. No. Class of Asset Particulars / Description Rate of Depreciation (WDV)
I. BUILDINGS
1 Residential Buildings Residential buildings (except hotels & boarding houses) 5%
2 Hotels & Boarding Houses Buildings used mainly for hotels & boarding houses 10%
3 Business Buildings Buildings used for business purposes (general) 10%
4 Temporary Structures Purely temporary erections such as wooden structures 40%
II. FURNITURE & FITTINGS
5 Furniture & Fittings Including electrical fittings such as wiring, switches, sockets, fans, etc. 10%
III. MACHINERY & PLANT
6 General Machinery General machinery and plant (not covered elsewhere) 15%
7 Motor Cars (Not on Hire) Motor cars (other than those used in business of running them on hire) 15%
8 Motor Cars (On Hire) Motor cars used in business of running them on hire 30%
9 Aeroplanes Aeroplanes – aero-engines 40%
10 Ships Ships 20%
11 Commercial Vehicles Motor buses, lorries, taxis used in business of running them on hire 30%
12 Moulds Moulds used in rubber & plastics goods factories 30%
13 Energy-Saving Devices Solar power generators, windmills, etc. 40%
14 Pollution Control Equipment Air pollution control equipment, water pollution control equipment 40%
15 Medical Equipment Life-saving medical equipment (e.g., ECG, dialysis, X-ray machines) 40%
16 Computers & Software Computers including computer software (Note 7 defines "computer software") 40%
17 Books (Annual) Books – annual publications 100%
18 Books (Other) Books – other than annual publications 60%
IV. INTANGIBLE ASSETS (Section 32(1)(ii))
19 Intangible Assets Know-how, patents, copyrights, trademarks, licences, franchises, or any other business or commercial rights of similar nature 25%

πŸ“˜ Important Notes from Appendix I

  • Computer Software Definition: Any computer programme recorded on any disc, tape, perforated media, or other information storage device (Note 7)
  • Electrical Fittings: Include wiring, switches, sockets, and fans (Note 5)
  • 180-Day Rule: If an asset is put to use for less than 180 days in the previous year, only 50% of the normal rate applies for that year
  • Block of Assets: Individual asset tracking ends once grouped into its respective block
  • Additional Depreciation: Under section 32(1)(iia), additional 20% may be available for new plant & machinery in manufacturing or power generation (additional 20% for notified backward areas)
  • No Depreciation on Land: Land is not a depreciable asset
  • Power Generation: For power-generation undertakings, Straight-Line Method (SLM) option is available with different notified rates

🏒 Depreciation Rates as per Companies Act, 2013

Legal Framework

Schedule II of the Companies Act, 2013 provides useful life of assets for depreciation purposes.

Method: Either Straight Line Method (SLM) or Written Down Value (WDV) - must be applied consistently for each class of asset.

Key Difference: Unlike the Income Tax Act's fixed-rate system, Companies Act is based on useful life of assets.

πŸ“Š Depreciation Rate Chart - Companies Act, 2013 (Schedule II)

S. No. Asset Category Particulars / Description Useful Life (Years) Approx. SLM Rate Approx. WDV Rate
I. BUILDINGS
1 Factory Buildings Factory buildings 30 3.17% 9.5%
2 Other Buildings Other buildings (excluding factory buildings) 60 1.58% 4.87%
3 Temporary Structures Temporary erections such as wooden structures 3 31.67% 63.16%
II. FURNITURE & FITTINGS
4 Furniture & Fittings Including electrical fittings (fans, wiring, switches, etc.) 10 9.5% 25.89%
III. PLANT & MACHINERY
5 General Plant & Machinery General plant and machinery (not specified elsewhere) 15 6.33% 18.10%
6 Continuous Process Plant Continuous process plant (where not otherwise specified) 8 11.88% 27.82%
7 Motor Vehicles (Not on Hire) Motor vehicles (other than those used on hire) 8 11.88% 25.89%
8 Commercial Vehicles Motor buses, lorries, taxis used in a business of running them on hire 6 15.83% 31.23%
9 Computers (Hardware) Computers (desktops, laptops, servers, peripherals) 3 31.67% 63.16%
10 Computer Software Computer software (acquired) 3 31.67% 63.16%
11 Electrical Installations Electrical installations, cables, transformers, etc. 10 9.5% 25.89%
IV. OFFICE EQUIPMENT
12 Office Equipment Fax, photocopiers, telephones, etc. 5 19% 39.3%
V. VEHICLES
13 Two-Wheelers Motor cycles, scooters, mopeds 10 9.5% 25.89%
14 Motor Cars Motor cars (not on hire) 8 11.88% 25.89%
15 Commercial Vehicles Motor buses, lorries, taxis (on hire) 6 15.83% 31.23%
VI. INTANGIBLE ASSETS
16 Intangible Assets Licences, trademarks, software, etc. – Amortised over estimated useful life As per management estimate – –

βš™οΈ Key Principles - Companies Act, 2013 (Schedule II)

  • Depreciation Method: Either SLM or WDV - must be applied consistently for each class of asset. Change in method = change in accounting estimate (requires disclosure)
  • Residual Value: Normally not more than 5% of the original cost of the asset, unless justified and disclosed
  • Useful Life: As per Schedule II, unless the company can justify a different life supported by technical advice and Board resolution
  • Component Accounting: Significant parts of an asset with different useful lives must be depreciated separately
  • Intangible Assets: Amortisation over the useful life. If life cannot be estimated reliably β†’ 10 years (default)
  • Transition: When Companies Act, 2013 became effective (1st April 2014), remaining life of existing assets had to be reassessed

πŸ’» Depreciation on Computer and Computer Software

Overview

Depreciation on computers and computer software under the Income Tax Act, 1961 is governed by Section 32 read with Rule 5 and New Appendix I of the Income-tax Rules, 1962.

1. Block of Asset & Rate of Depreciation

(A) Computers (Hardware)

  • Asset Class: "Machinery and plant"
  • Block: Computers including computer software (a separate block under "Machinery and plant")
  • Normal Depreciation Rate (WDV method): 40% per annum
  • Note: Earlier this block enjoyed 60%, but after notification capping maximum rates to 40%, the effective rate is now 40% for most assessees from AY 2018-19 onwards

(B) Computer Software – What Exactly is Covered?

Definition from Note 7: "Computer software" means any computer programme recorded on any disc, tape, perforated media or other information storage device.

Covered Items:

  • Off-the-shelf / licensed software (ERP, accounting, OS, office suite, etc.)
  • Desktop / laptop / server hardware
  • Systems software / application software purchased (not self-generated)

All clubbed into one block: "Computers including computer software" @ 40%

2. Intangible Assets vs. "Computer Software"

Computer Software (40% Block)

Payment for acquiring and using a software program (standard or customised) for your own business operations

Examples: ERP systems, Accounting software, CRM, Operating systems

Intangible Assets (25% Block)

Payment for wider commercial rights under Section 32(1)(ii)

Examples: Perpetual marketing rights, distribution rights, right to exploit copyright, know-how, patents, franchises

3. Method and "Put to Use" Condition

Depreciation Method

Written Down Value (WDV) method is used, block-wise, under section 32(1) read with sections 2(11) & 43(6)

Exception: Only power-generation undertakings can use SLM

Put-to-Use Rule (Half-Year vs. Full Year)

  • If used ≀ 180 days: Only 50% of 40% = 20% depreciation is allowed on those additions
  • If used > 180 days: Full 40% depreciation on additions

Block Concept

  • Once an asset enters the block, individual items are not tracked for depreciation
  • Only track for WDV and "put to use" in the year of addition
  • Sale proceeds reduce from WDV
  • If block ceases to exist β†’ balancing adjustment under Section 50 (short-term capital gain/loss)

4. Quick Summary for Practice (AY 2025-26)

Asset Type Block Classification Rate (WDV) Notes
Computers
(desktops, laptops, servers, etc.)
Computers including computer software 40% Standard IT hardware
Licensed Software
(ERP, accounting, CRM, OS, etc.)
Computers including computer software 40% Business operation software
Commercial Rights in Software
(copyright exploitation, franchise rights)
Intangible assets 25% Classification may be litigated

πŸ“Š Comparative Analysis: Income Tax Act vs Companies Act

Asset Type Income Tax Rate (WDV) Useful Life (Companies Act) Approx. WDV Rate (Companies Act) Difference
Building (general) 10% 30 years 9.5% +0.5%
Furniture 10% 10 years 25.9% -15.9%
Plant & Machinery 15% 15 years 18.1% -3.1%
Motor Car 15% 8 years 25.9% -10.9%
Computers 40% 3 years 63.16% -23.16%
Intangible Assets 25% As estimated Varies –

πŸ”‘ Key Differences

  • Purpose: Income Tax Act β†’ Tax computation | Companies Act β†’ Financial reporting
  • Basis: Income Tax Act β†’ Fixed rates | Companies Act β†’ Useful life
  • Deferred Tax: Differences between IT and Companies Act depreciation create Deferred Tax Liability (DTL) or Asset (DTA) as per AS 22 / Ind AS 12
  • Flexibility: Companies Act allows companies to justify different useful life with technical advice and Board resolution
  • Component Accounting: Required under Companies Act, not under Income Tax Act

πŸ”„ Depreciation Calculation Process Flowchart

START
Fixed Asset Acquired
↓
Step 1
Identify Asset Class
(Building, Machinery, Computer, etc.)
↓
Step 2
Determine Applicable Regime
Income Tax Act or Companies Act?
↓
Decision
For Income Tax Act
↓
Step 3
Assign to Block of Assets
(e.g., Computers @ 40%)
↓
Check
Used for > 180 days?
↓ YES
Full Rate
Apply 100% of rate
↓ NO
Half Rate
Apply 50% of rate
↓
Step 4
Calculate Depreciation
Rate Γ— WDV
↓
Step 5
Update Written Down Value
WDV = Previous WDV - Depreciation
↓
END
Depreciation Claimed

Formula Reference

Depreciation (WDV Method) = Rate Γ— Opening WDV

Closing WDV = Opening WDV + Additions - Depreciation - Sale Proceeds

For First Year with < 180 days use: Effective Rate = 50% of Normal Rate

🧠 Depreciation Mind Map

DEPRECIATION
OF
FIXED ASSETS
Legal Framework
Income Tax Act 1961
Section 32
Companies Act 2013
Schedule II
Rule 5 & Appendix I
Methods
WDV Method
(Reducing Balance)
SLM Method
(Straight Line)
Asset Classes
Buildings
5-10%
Furniture
10%
Machinery
15-30%
Computers
40%
Intangibles
25%
Special Rules
180-Day Rule
(50% Rate)
Block of Assets
Concept
Additional
Depreciation 20%
No Depreciation
on Land
Key Rates
(IT Act)
Residential: 5%
Business Bldg: 10%
Motor Car: 15%
Taxis/Lorries: 30%
Computers: 40%
Companies Act
Features
Useful Life
Basis
5% Residual
Value
Component
Accounting
DTL/DTA
Impact

πŸ’‘ Practical Tips for Professionals

βœ“ Verify Conditions

Always verify actual use and ownership conditions under section 32 before claiming depreciation

πŸ“Š Maintain Registers

Maintain block-wise asset registers to simplify WDV computation and audit trail

πŸ”„ Reconcile WDV

Reconcile opening WDV with the previous year's closing figure to ensure accuracy

πŸ’° Track Disposals

Keep detailed note of any disposal to adjust sale proceeds under section 50 (capital gains on block)

πŸ“… 180-Day Rule

Carefully track the "put to use" date for new assets to correctly apply the 180-day rule

πŸ“ Document Classification

For computer software vs intangible assets, maintain proper documentation for classification rationale

πŸ” Additional Depreciation

Check eligibility for additional depreciation u/s 32(1)(iia) for manufacturing units

βš–οΈ Deferred Tax

Calculate and disclose deferred tax arising from differences between IT Act and Companies Act depreciation

πŸ“‹ Illustrative Classification Summary

Category Examples Depreciation Rate (IT Act)
Building (factory, office) Factory shed, office building 10%
Furniture & Fittings Tables, chairs, cabinets, fans 10%
Plant & Machinery (general) Tools, machinery, equipment 15%
Motor Vehicle (not on hire) Company car 15%
Motor Vehicle (on hire) Taxi, transport lorry 30%
Computer hardware/software Laptop, desktop, ERP software 40%
Intangible asset Trademark, franchise, copyright 25%

Prepared for Assessment Year 2025-26

Educational Resource | Not Legal Advice | Consult a Qualified CA for Specific Cases

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