How to track depreciation?
Andrew Sackville-West
andrew at farwestbilliards.com
Tue Oct 4 12:14:04 EDT 2005
David Harrison wrote:
> On 9/30/05, *Mark Johnson* <mrj001 at shaw.ca <mailto:mrj001 at shaw.ca>> wrote:
>
> <<<snippity doo-dah>>>
>
> This method works fine for assets that depreciate, like cars and
> computers. But, what about my house, or another asset that goes up in
> value? Would you then record "negative depreciation"? If you are
> recording depreciation for your car, then I would argue that you should.
>
> I trust I haven't confused the issue more ;)
Houses are interesting as they generally appreciate, plus you can
increase your basis in the house by making improvements which hopefully
increase the value more than what you spend... I don't personally do
this as I'm too lazy, but a friend keeps an asset account for the house
which carries the purchase value of the house, as well as the associated
mortgage accounts and interest expense accounts etc. Anytime he spends
any money that adds to the house in any way: repairs, new roof,
whatever, he records that not as an expense, but as an addition to that
asset. Then when he sells the house, his basis reflects any money he's
invested in the house. Makes his gains smaller for tax purposes (US),
but also allows him to really get a handle on what he's doing with the
house. What this doesn't do is make any record of increased market
value. I think that gets too complicated as you'd have to call it income
and that could get really screwy, although you could call it unrealized
gains maybe? IANAA.
my .02
A
>
> --
> David Harrison, BAccS, CGA
>
>
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