Straight-line depreciation
Straight-line depreciation spreads an asset's depreciable cost equally over its useful life. The annual charge is (cost minus residual value) ÷ useful life in years, producing a constant expense each period.
FrameworkDepreciation
See it move
A delivery lorry costs €50,000 with an estimated residual value of €5,000 and a five-year useful life. Straight-line depreciation divides the €45,000 depreciable amount evenly: €9,000 charged in year one, €9,000 in year two, and so on through year five, an identical layer stacking up to the full €45,000, leaving the lorry carried at its €5,000 residual.
The formula
Variables
- Cost (purchase price plus directly attributable acquisition costs) (€)
- Residual value (estimated salvage value at end of useful life) (€)
- Useful life (years)
Produces an identical charge each period; the most widely used depreciation method.
Check yourself
A company purchases a machine for €50,000, estimates a residual value of €5,000 and a useful life of five years. Using the straight-line method, what is the carrying amount of the machine at the end of year four?