Key Takeaways

  • The method applies a constant rate to the net book value, so the annual charge decreases automatically as the asset ages.
  • A common variant is double-declining balance, which uses twice the straight-line rate (e.g., 20% straight-line becomes 40% declining balance).
  • IAS 16.61 requires the depreciation method to reflect the pattern in which the asset's future economic benefits are consumed by the entity.
  • Selecting declining balance without documenting why consumption is front-loaded is the fastest way to draw a reviewer query on the fixed-asset file.

What is Declining Balance Depreciation?

IAS 16.62 lists the declining balance method alongside straight-line and units of production as acceptable approaches. The entity picks the method that most closely reflects the expected pattern of consumption of the asset's economic benefits (IAS 16.60). For assets that deliver disproportionate output or value in their early years (production machinery subject to rapid technological obsolescence, for instance, or vehicles that lose efficiency with age), declining balance front-loads the expense and better matches cost against revenue.

The mechanics are straightforward. The entity sets a depreciation rate (often double the equivalent straight-line rate) and multiplies it by the carrying amount at the start of each period. Because the base shrinks each year, the charge shrinks too. Residual value acts as a floor: depreciation stops once the carrying amount equals the residual value. IAS 16.51 requires an annual review of both the method and the useful life estimate; a change in either is treated as a change in accounting estimate under IAS 8.32 and applied prospectively.

Worked example: Hoffmann Maschinenbau GmbH

Client: German engineering company, FY2025, revenue EUR 28M, HGB reporter also preparing an IFRS reporting package for its parent. Hoffmann acquires a CNC milling machine on 1 January 2023 for EUR 480,000. The machine has a useful life of five years and a residual value of EUR 30,000. Management selects the double-declining balance method because output from the machine is highest in its first two years (the machine runs three shifts initially, reducing to one shift by year four as newer models take over primary production).

Documentation note: record management's rationale for method selection under IAS 16.60, referencing the shift-pattern data from the production planning schedule.

Step 1 — Set the depreciation rate

The straight-line rate for a five-year life is 20%. The double-declining balance rate is 40%.

Documentation note: record the rate derivation and cross-reference to the useful life assessment filed in the fixed-asset working paper.

Step 2 — Calculate the annual charges

YearOpening carrying amount (EUR)Depreciation at 40% (EUR)Closing carrying amount (EUR)
2023480,000192,000288,000
2024288,000115,200172,800
2025172,80069,120103,680
2026103,68041,47262,208
202762,20832,20830,000

In year five the formula would produce EUR 24,883 (40% of EUR 62,208), but that would reduce the carrying amount below residual value. The charge is therefore capped at EUR 32,208 (EUR 62,208 minus the EUR 30,000 residual value).

Documentation note: record the full depreciation schedule, flag the year-five cap adjustment, and note that total depreciation over five years equals the depreciable amount of EUR 450,000 (EUR 480,000 cost minus EUR 30,000 residual value).

Step 3 — Verify the FY2025 charge

The depreciation expense recognised in FY2025 is EUR 69,120. Compare this to the prior-year charge of EUR 115,200 to confirm the declining pattern is consistent with the method applied.

Documentation note: agree the FY2025 charge to the general ledger, verify the opening carrying amount ties to the prior-year closing balance, and confirm no impairment indicators exist under IAS 36.

Conclusion: the EUR 69,120 charge for FY2025 is defensible because the double-declining balance rate ties to the five-year useful life, the residual value floor is respected in the schedule, and management's rationale for front-loaded depreciation is supported by production shift data.

Why it matters in practice

  • Teams select declining balance because it matches the local tax depreciation schedule (common in Germany under HGB) without separately assessing whether the pattern reflects economic consumption for IFRS purposes. IAS 16.62 is explicit that tax depreciation methods are not automatically acceptable. ISA 540.13(a) requires the auditor to evaluate whether the entity's method is appropriate for the accounting framework being applied.
  • The residual value floor is often omitted from the depreciation schedule, allowing the carrying amount to drop below residual value in the final years. IAS 16.53 states that the depreciable amount is cost minus residual value, and IAS 16.50 confirms that depreciation ceases when the asset is derecognised or when the carrying amount equals residual value.

Declining balance depreciation vs. straight-line depreciation

DimensionDeclining balanceStraight-line
Charge patternHigher in early years, decreasing over the asset's lifeEqual charge each period
Carrying amount profileDrops steeply at first, flattens toward residual valueDeclines evenly from cost to residual value
Best suited toAssets with front-loaded output or rapid obsolescenceAssets consumed evenly over time (buildings, office fit-outs)
Effect on profitDepresses early-year profit relative to straight-line; later years show lower chargesNeutral spread across all periods
Audit focusJustification that the pattern reflects actual consumption (IAS 16.60)Useful life and residual value reasonableness

The distinction matters on engagements where a client uses declining balance for one reporting framework (HGB tax accounts) and straight-line for another (IFRS consolidated accounts). The auditor must verify that each framework's method is independently justified, not simply carried across from the other.

Related terms

Frequently asked questions

Can I switch from declining balance to straight-line during the asset's life?

Yes, if the pattern of economic benefit consumption changes. IAS 16.61 requires the method to be reviewed at least annually. A change is a change in accounting estimate under IAS 8.32, applied prospectively from the date of change. Document the reason for the switch and recalculate the remaining charge based on the carrying amount at the date of change.

Does declining balance depreciation apply to intangible assets?

IAS 38.97 permits declining balance for intangible assets with finite useful lives, subject to the same principle: the method must reflect the pattern in which economic benefits are consumed. In practice most entities apply straight-line to intangibles because proving a front-loaded consumption pattern for items like software licences or patents is difficult to support with evidence.

How does the auditor test whether the declining balance rate is appropriate?

Compare the rate to the asset's actual usage pattern. ISA 540.18 requires the auditor to evaluate whether management's assumptions (here, the rate and its link to consumption) are reasonable. Obtain production data, maintenance logs, or output statistics for the first two years and check whether the front-loaded pattern management assumed is materialising. If actual usage is linear, the method may need revision.