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I have a rental property and I know how to track the depreciation for its original building value.
The building had improvement1 in 2018 for $10000 and improvement2 in 2019 for $12000.
What is the best way to track the depreciation for improvement1 and improvement2?
Should I create the following fixed asset accounts?
Improvement1
Improvement1 Accumulated Depreciation
Improvement2
Improvement2 Accumulated Depreciation
Charlie Hu
Solved! Go to Solution.
Thanks for posting this asset depreciation management concern here in our community for QuickBooks, Charlie.
I can share some insights on how you can handle this in your QuickBooks Desktop account. If you are using QuickBooks Enterprise, Desktop Premier Accountant, and Enterprise Accountant, we have a tool called Fixed Asset Manager to help calculate your depreciation. See this link for the steps on setting up Fixed Asset Manager.
If you have a different service, we have separate process for you. I'm adding the steps below for you.
Set up an asset account to track depreciation:
You can enter the depreciation amount in the register or use a journal entry to record the depreciated amount.
As always, we do recommend consulting an accountant first for help with accounting for your depreciation. We are here to guide you with general QuickBooks concerns, but we can't provide in-depth accounting advices for your business. It is best to reach out with a professional who will help you with this topic to ensure your books are correct at the end of the year.
For other questions or concerns about this assets and depreciation management in QuickBooks Desktop, post here again. You can also mention me in your posts to get me notified of your reply. Have a nice start of the week!
Shortest solution: you need to add a fixed asset account for each improvement. They each have their own depreciation schedule separate from the property itself.
As to tracking Accumulated Depreciation separately for each asset depends on where you track the actual depreciation. If done outside QB in a spreadsheet or different software you do not need a separate Accumulated Depreciation account for each asset. In fact your balance sheet can get cumbersome with all those sub accounts
Thanks for posting this asset depreciation management concern here in our community for QuickBooks, Charlie.
I can share some insights on how you can handle this in your QuickBooks Desktop account. If you are using QuickBooks Enterprise, Desktop Premier Accountant, and Enterprise Accountant, we have a tool called Fixed Asset Manager to help calculate your depreciation. See this link for the steps on setting up Fixed Asset Manager.
If you have a different service, we have separate process for you. I'm adding the steps below for you.
Set up an asset account to track depreciation:
You can enter the depreciation amount in the register or use a journal entry to record the depreciated amount.
As always, we do recommend consulting an accountant first for help with accounting for your depreciation. We are here to guide you with general QuickBooks concerns, but we can't provide in-depth accounting advices for your business. It is best to reach out with a professional who will help you with this topic to ensure your books are correct at the end of the year.
For other questions or concerns about this assets and depreciation management in QuickBooks Desktop, post here again. You can also mention me in your posts to get me notified of your reply. Have a nice start of the week!
Shortest solution: you need to add a fixed asset account for each improvement. They each have their own depreciation schedule separate from the property itself.
As to tracking Accumulated Depreciation separately for each asset depends on where you track the actual depreciation. If done outside QB in a spreadsheet or different software you do not need a separate Accumulated Depreciation account for each asset. In fact your balance sheet can get cumbersome with all those sub accounts
Since major improvements don't happen quite often, I prefer to add a fixed asset account for each improvement. Thank you for your input.
Charlie
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