Asset Details
€250.000
€40.000
IAS 16 Depreciation Audit Working Paper Template — free PDF
Practical audit guide covering all four depreciation methods with worked examples, component depreciation checklist, change-in-estimate documentation template, and useful life benchmarks by asset class.
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IAS 16 Depreciation for Agriculture
Critical distinction: Biological assets — living animals and plants (dairy herds, breeding livestock, orchards, vineyards, plantation crops) — are accounted for under IAS 41 Agriculture at fair value less costs to sell, NOT under IAS 16. This calculator handles agricultural PP&E only: tractors, farm buildings, irrigation systems, processing equipment, and land improvements. If you need to value biological assets, IAS 41 applies a different measurement model entirely.
Agricultural PP&E shares characteristics with both manufacturing (heavy equipment) and real estate (land and buildings), but with unique seasonal patterns and residual value dynamics. Farm equipment — tractors, combine harvesters, sprayers, and implements — typically retains significant residual value because there is an active global secondary market for used agricultural machinery. A 10-year-old tractor from a major manufacturer may retain 30–50% of its original cost. This means residual values must be carefully estimated and reviewed annually per IAS 16.51.
The distinction between land and land improvements is critical for agriculture. Land itself is never depreciated (IAS 16.58), but improvements to land — irrigation systems, drainage, fencing, roads, and earthworks — are depreciable assets with finite useful lives. When an agricultural property is acquired, management must allocate the purchase price between bare land (not depreciated), land improvements (depreciated), and buildings (depreciated with component analysis). This allocation requires judgment and may benefit from a professional agricultural valuer's assessment.
Typical Asset Classes — Agriculture
| Asset | Useful Life | Method | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Farm tractors and harvesters | 8–15 years | Straight-line or reducing balance | Significant residual value when maintained; active secondary market |
| Farm buildings (barns, storage) | 20–40 years | Straight-line | Separate land component; simpler than commercial buildings |
| Irrigation systems | 15–25 years | Straight-line | Pivots, pumps, piping — consider component approach |
| Processing equipment | 10–15 years | Straight-line | Grain dryers, milk cooling, fruit processing |
| Fencing and land improvements | 10–20 years | Straight-line | Land improvements are depreciable (unlike land itself) |
Key IAS 16 Considerations — Agriculture
Biological assets use IAS 41, NOT IAS 16 — critical distinction
Bearer plants (vines, trees) are IAS 16 after 2014 amendment
Land improvements (irrigation, fencing) are depreciable; bare land is not
High residual values for farm equipment — review annually (IAS 16.51)
Seasonal usage does not stop depreciation (IAS 16.55)
Worked Example: Agricultural Tractor
A farming entity acquires a tractor in August 2025 for €250,000. Estimated residual value is €40,000 (16% — reflecting strong used equipment market), useful life is 12 years. Straight-line depreciation with a December year-end.
Cost: €250,000
Residual value: €40,000
Depreciable amount: €210,000
Annual depreciation: €17,500 (straight-line)
First year depreciation: €7,292 (pro-rata: 5 months — August to December)
Audit Considerations
Agricultural entity auditors must verify the IAS 16 vs IAS 41 classification for all significant assets. Bearer plant accounting (IAS 16 after 2014 amendment) requires specific attention. Land vs land improvements separation should be verified against valuations. EU Common Agricultural Policy grants may affect asset recognition under IAS 20.