10. Fixed Assets Year-End Close — AdditionsDeletions
Fixed assets errors are long-term errors.A mistake made during asset capitalisation or disposal does not affect only one year—it impacts multiple years of depreciation, profit, tax, and audit positions.
This guide explains how to correctly close fixed assets at year-end, focusing on additions, deletions, and asset validation before depreciation is finalised.
1. Introduction — Why Fixed Asset Closing Is High-Risk
Fixed assets directly affect:
Profit (through depreciation)
Balance sheet strength
Tax depreciation claims
Audit qualifications
Improper asset closing leads to:
Wrong depreciation for years
Capital vs revenue disputes
Disallowance of depreciation
Overstated or understated assets
Errors in fixed asset closing compound year after year and are difficult to reverse later.
2. Objective
To ensure that at year-end:
All genuine asset additions are capitalised
Revenue expenses are not wrongly capitalised
Disposed assets are removed correctly
Fixed Asset Register (FAR) is accurate
Asset balances are auditable and defensible
3. What Constitutes Proper Fixed Asset Closing?
Proper fixed asset closing ensures:
Asset exists physically
Ownership is established
Asset is used for business
Correct capitalisation date is applied
Asset is recorded under correct category
Fixed asset closing must be completed before depreciation finalisation.
4. CABTA Framework — “The 7-Step Fixed Asset Closing Process”
Step 1 — Identify Asset Additions During the Year
Prepare a list of all capital expenditures:
Machinery
Computers
Furniture
Vehicles
Leasehold improvements
Plant & equipment
Cross-check with:
Expense ledgers
Bank payments
CWIP
Missed asset additions lead to undercapitalisation and wrong depreciation.
Step 2 — Capital vs Revenue Validation
For each item, determine:
Does it provide enduring benefit?
Does it increase capacity or efficiency?
If yes → capitaliseIf no → expense
Common misclassifications:
Repairs capitalised
Software licences expensed incorrectly
AMC capitalised
Step 3 — Determine Capitalisation Date
Capitalisation date is when:
Asset is ready for intended use
Not necessarily invoice date or payment date
Depreciation starts from capitalisation date, not purchase date.
Wrong capitalisation date leads to excess or short depreciation claims.
Step 4 — Update Fixed Asset Register (FAR)
FAR should include:
Asset description
Location
Invoice reference
Capitalisation date
Useful life
Depreciation method
Missing FAR is a serious audit weakness.
Step 5 — Identify Asset Deletions / Disposals
Review:
Sale of assets
Scrapping
Obsolescence
Assets no longer in use
Disposed assets must be:
Removed from FAR
Depreciation stopped
Profit/loss on sale recognised
Step 6 — Physical Verification of Assets
Conduct:
Physical asset verification
Asset tagging (where feasible)
Reconciliation with FAR
Missing assets require investigation and documentation.
Assets without physical existence are routinely questioned in audit.
Step 7 — Review CWIP (Capital Work-in-Progress)
Ensure:
CWIP relates to ongoing projects
Completed assets are transferred to FAR
Old CWIP is not carried without reason
Long-pending CWIP is a red flag.
5. Common Fixed Asset Closing Mistakes
Capitalising revenue expenses
Expensing capital items
No FAR
Depreciation on disposed assets
No physical verification
Wrong asset classification
These mistakes often result in depreciation disallowance during assessment.
6. Audit Perspective on Fixed Assets
Auditors examine:
FAR completeness
Capitalisation policy
Asset existence
Disposal treatment
Consistency year-on-year
Weak asset controls often lead to qualified audit remarks.
7. Case Example — Avoiding Depreciation Disallowance