12. FAR Update — Physical Verification & Tags

A Fixed Asset Register (FAR) is not merely a schedule—it is the primary evidence of asset existence, ownership, and continuity.Physical verification and asset tagging convert accounting records into defensible financial reality.

1. Introduction — Why FAR Update Is Critical

Many SMEs maintain FARs only on paper, without linking them to actual physical assets.Auditors and tax authorities do not accept FAR balances unless physical existence is demonstrable.
Assets without physical verification are treated as non-existent during audit and assessment.

2. Objective

To ensure that at year-end:
  • All assets recorded in FAR physically exist
  • Asset location and condition are verified
  • Missing, obsolete, or scrapped assets are identified
  • FAR reflects true asset base
  • Depreciation and WDV remain defensible

3. What Is FAR Physical Verification?

FAR physical verification involves:
  • Identifying each asset physically
  • Matching it with FAR details
  • Verifying location, usage, and condition
  • Updating discrepancies
It is a control activity, not a clerical task.

4. CABTA Framework — “The 6-Step FAR Physical Verification Process”

Step 1 — Freeze FAR Before Verification

Ensure:
  • No new assets are added during verification
  • FAR opening balances are final
  • Asset list is complete
Verification must be against a frozen FAR.

Step 2 — Conduct Physical Asset Verification

For each asset:
  • Locate the asset
  • Verify identification
  • Check usage and condition
  • Confirm existence
Verification may be:
  • Location-wise
  • Department-wise
  • Custodian-wise
Assets not physically traceable are immediate audit red flags.

Step 3 — Asset Tagging / Identification

Each asset should have:
  • Asset tag / barcode / unique ID
  • Correspondence with FAR asset code
Tagging ensures:
  • Traceability
  • Prevention of duplication
  • Easier future verification

Step 4 — Identify Discrepancies

Common discrepancies:
  • Asset in FAR but not physically found
  • Asset physically present but not in FAR
  • Asset obsolete but still capitalised
  • Asset transferred without FAR update
Each discrepancy must be investigated and documented.

Step 5 — FAR Update & Adjustments

Based on verification:
  • Add missing assets
  • Remove scrapped or sold assets
  • Reclassify wrongly grouped assets
  • Update location / custodian
Any write-off must have approval and documentation.
Unauthorised asset write-offs attract audit objections.

Step 6 — Verification Report & Sign-Off

Prepare:
  • Physical verification report
  • Discrepancy summary
  • Management approval
This report becomes a key audit document.

5. Audit Perspective on FAR Verification

Auditors verify:
  • Physical verification evidence
  • Tagging discipline
  • Consistency year-on-year
  • FAR linkage with depreciation
Absence of verification often leads to qualified remarks.

6. Income-Tax Risk Areas

Tax authorities examine:
  • Existence of depreciated assets
  • Excess depreciation claims
  • Assets not put to use
Missing assets may lead to depreciation disallowance.

7. Common SME Mistakes

  • No physical verification
  • FAR maintained only in Excel without linkage
  • No asset tagging
  • Obsolete assets not written off
  • Verification done casually
These mistakes weaken long-term tax positions.

8. Case Example — Preventing Depreciation Disallowance

Issue:AO questioned existence of old machinery.
CABTA Action:
  • Produced FAR
  • Physical verification report
  • Tagging records
Outcome:
  • Depreciation allowed
  • No adjustment made

9. Tools & Templates (Application Layer)

  • FAR Physical Verification Checklist
  • Asset Tagging Register
  • Discrepancy Report Format
  • Asset Write-Off Approval Note

10. CABTA Insight

“Depreciation without physical existence is only a number, not a claim.”

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