Carrying amount
Carrying amount is the value at which an asset or liability is recognised in the balance sheet after deducting accumulated depreciation, amortisation and impairment losses from cost; also called net book value.
See it move
A machine bought for €120,000 has, after three years, accumulated depreciation of €36,000 and a €10,000 impairment loss, leaving a carrying amount of €74,000. Selling it later for €80,000 produces a €6,000 gain on disposal, since the sale proceeds exceed the carrying amount recorded on the balance sheet.
The formula
Variables
- Cost (original purchase price plus directly attributable acquisition costs) (€)
- Accumulated depreciation (total depreciation charged since acquisition) (€)
- Accumulated impairment losses (total impairment recognised since acquisition) (€)
Also called net book value; the figure shown on the balance sheet for the asset.
Check yourself
A company purchased a machine for €120,000. At the end of year three, accumulated straight-line depreciation totals €45,000. The company then recognises an impairment loss of €10,000 on the machine. What is the carrying amount of the machine immediately after the impairment is recognised?