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Asset Disposal Account in Depreciation Questions: Format and Entries

Learn how to prepare an Asset Disposal Account in depreciation questions, with format, journal entries, solved examples, and common mistakes.

  • 11th
  • Accounts
A ledger-paper machine being lifted as cost, depreciation, and sale proceeds flow into a balance scale

Asset Disposal Account is one of those depreciation topics that looks more difficult than it really is.

The confusion usually starts because several things happen together. An old asset is sold or discarded. Depreciation has already been charged on it. Money may be received from sale. Sometimes there is a selling expense. Finally, the business has to find profit or loss on disposal.

If you try to solve all of this in your head, the question feels messy.

The Asset Disposal Account makes it tidy.

Once you understand what each side of the account means, most depreciation questions become much calmer.

What Asset Disposal Means

Asset disposal means that a fixed asset is no longer kept in the business.

This can happen when the asset is:

  • sold for cash
  • sold on credit
  • exchanged for another asset
  • discarded because it is useless
  • destroyed by accident
  • scrapped for a small amount

For example, a business may sell an old machine, replace an old computer, or scrap furniture that can no longer be used.

The important point is simple: the asset is going out of the books.

When an asset goes out, the business must remove both:

  • the asset’s original cost
  • the depreciation already charged on that asset

Then it compares the asset’s book value with the amount recovered from sale or scrap.

Why Asset Disposal Account Is Prepared

The Asset Disposal Account is prepared to answer one main question:

Did the business make a profit or loss when the asset was disposed of?

To answer that, we need four figures:

FigureMeaning
Original costThe cost at which the asset was recorded
Accumulated depreciationTotal depreciation already provided on the asset
Sale proceedsAmount received from selling or scrapping the asset
Disposal expensesAmount spent to sell or remove the asset

The Asset Disposal Account brings these figures into one place.

Without this account, students often mix up cost, depreciation, book value, and sale value.

The Core Logic

Before looking at the format, remember this logic:

StepWhat you find
1Original cost of the asset disposed of
2Depreciation charged on that asset till the date of disposal
3Book value of the asset
4Net amount recovered from sale
5Profit or loss on disposal

The most important formula is:

ParticularFormula
Book valueOriginal cost minus accumulated depreciation
Net sale proceedsSale proceeds minus disposal expenses
Profit or lossNet sale proceeds compared with book value

If net sale proceeds are more than book value, there is profit.

If net sale proceeds are less than book value, there is loss.

If net sale proceeds are equal to book value, there is no profit and no loss.

Format of Asset Disposal Account

A simple Asset Disposal Account looks like this:

Asset Disposal Account
Debit SideRs.Credit SideRs.
To Asset A/cOriginal costBy Provision for Depreciation A/cAccumulated depreciation
To Bank A/cDisposal expensesBy Bank A/cSale proceeds
To Profit and Loss A/cProfit on disposalBy Profit and Loss A/cLoss on disposal

The names may change slightly depending on the question.

For example:

  • Bank A/c may become Cash A/c if cash is received.
  • Provision for Depreciation A/c may be called Accumulated Depreciation A/c.
  • If the asset is sold on credit, Debtor or Buyer’s A/c may be used instead of Bank A/c.

The logic stays the same.

Journal Entries for Asset Disposal

When a separate Provision for Depreciation Account is maintained, the usual journal entries are:

Transfer the Original Cost of the Asset

ParticularsDebitCredit
Asset Disposal A/c Dr.Cost
To Asset A/cCost

This removes the asset’s original cost from the Asset Account.

Transfer Accumulated Depreciation

ParticularsDebitCredit
Provision for Depreciation A/c Dr.Accumulated depreciation
To Asset Disposal A/cAccumulated depreciation

This removes the depreciation already collected for the asset.

Record Sale Proceeds

ParticularsDebitCredit
Bank A/c Dr.Sale proceeds
To Asset Disposal A/cSale proceeds

If the asset is sold on credit, replace Bank A/c with the buyer’s account.

Record Disposal Expenses

ParticularsDebitCredit
Asset Disposal A/c Dr.Disposal expenses
To Bank A/cDisposal expenses

Expenses reduce the benefit from disposal, so they are debited to Asset Disposal Account.

Transfer Profit on Disposal

If the credit side is more than the debit side, there is profit.

ParticularsDebitCredit
Asset Disposal A/c Dr.Profit
To Profit and Loss A/cProfit

Transfer Loss on Disposal

If the debit side is more than the credit side, there is loss.

ParticularsDebitCredit
Profit and Loss A/c Dr.Loss
To Asset Disposal A/cLoss

Solved Example With Profit

Suppose a machine was purchased for Rs. 80,000. Depreciation already provided on it is Rs. 50,000. The machine is sold for Rs. 35,000. Selling expenses are Rs. 1,000.

First find the book value:

ParticularAmount
Original costRs. 80,000
Less: Accumulated depreciationRs. 50,000
Book valueRs. 30,000

Now find net sale proceeds:

ParticularAmount
Sale proceedsRs. 35,000
Less: Selling expensesRs. 1,000
Net sale proceedsRs. 34,000

Net sale proceeds are Rs. 34,000. Book value is Rs. 30,000.

So there is profit of Rs. 4,000.

Asset Disposal Account

Asset Disposal Account
Debit SideRs.Credit SideRs.
To Machine A/c80,000By Provision for Depreciation A/c50,000
To Bank A/c1,000By Bank A/c35,000
To Profit and Loss A/c4,000
Total85,000Total85,000

Notice how the account balances only after profit is transferred.

The journal entry for profit will be:

ParticularsDebitCredit
Asset Disposal A/c Dr.Rs. 4,000
To Profit and Loss A/cRs. 4,000

Solved Example With Loss

Suppose furniture was purchased for Rs. 1,20,000. Depreciation already provided is Rs. 72,000. The furniture is sold for Rs. 40,000.

Book value is:

ParticularAmount
Original costRs. 1,20,000
Less: Accumulated depreciationRs. 72,000
Book valueRs. 48,000

Sale proceeds are Rs. 40,000.

Since sale proceeds are less than book value, there is loss of Rs. 8,000.

Asset Disposal Account

Asset Disposal Account
Debit SideRs.Credit SideRs.
To Furniture A/c1,20,000By Provision for Depreciation A/c72,000
By Bank A/c40,000
By Profit and Loss A/c8,000
Total1,20,000Total1,20,000

The journal entry for loss will be:

ParticularsDebitCredit
Profit and Loss A/c Dr.Rs. 8,000
To Asset Disposal A/cRs. 8,000

When Depreciation Must Be Charged Up to the Date of Sale

Many students miss this step.

If an asset is sold during the year, depreciation must usually be calculated up to the date of sale before the disposal is recorded.

Suppose a machine is sold on 30 September. The accounting year ends on 31 March.

You cannot use last year’s accumulated depreciation only. You must also charge depreciation for the period from 1 April to 30 September.

The entry for current-year depreciation will be:

ParticularsDebitCredit
Depreciation A/c Dr.Current-year depreciation till sale date
To Provision for Depreciation A/cCurrent-year depreciation till sale date

After this, the total accumulated depreciation is transferred to Asset Disposal Account.

Example With Current-Year Depreciation

A machine was purchased for Rs. 1,00,000 on 1 April 2024. Depreciation is charged at 10% per year on cost. The machine is sold on 30 September 2025 for Rs. 82,000.

Depreciation for the first year:

PeriodCalculationAmount
1 April 2024 to 31 March 2025Rs. 1,00,000 x 10%Rs. 10,000

Depreciation for the current year up to sale:

PeriodCalculationAmount
1 April 2025 to 30 September 2025Rs. 1,00,000 x 10% x 6/12Rs. 5,000

Total accumulated depreciation:

ParticularAmount
First-year depreciationRs. 10,000
Current-year depreciation till saleRs. 5,000
Total depreciationRs. 15,000

Book value on sale date:

ParticularAmount
CostRs. 1,00,000
Less: Total depreciationRs. 15,000
Book valueRs. 85,000

The machine is sold for Rs. 82,000.

So there is loss of Rs. 3,000.

Asset Disposal Account

Asset Disposal Account
Debit SideRs.Credit SideRs.
To Machine A/c1,00,000By Provision for Depreciation A/c15,000
By Bank A/c82,000
By Profit and Loss A/c3,000
Total1,00,000Total1,00,000

This example shows why current-year depreciation matters. Without the extra Rs. 5,000 depreciation, the answer would be wrong.

When Only Part of an Asset Is Sold

Sometimes the question does not sell the whole asset account.

For example, a business may own three machines, but only one machine is sold. Or it may sell one computer out of several computers.

In that case, you must transfer only the cost and depreciation of the asset sold.

Do not transfer the total balance of the Asset Account.

What to transferWhat not to transfer
Cost of the asset soldCost of assets still in use
Depreciation on the asset soldDepreciation on assets still in use
Sale proceeds of the asset soldSale value of unrelated assets

Asset Sold at Book Value

Sometimes the sale value is exactly equal to the book value.

In that case, there is no profit and no loss.

Suppose an asset costs Rs. 50,000 and accumulated depreciation is Rs. 20,000.

Book value is Rs. 30,000.

If it is sold for Rs. 30,000, the Asset Disposal Account will balance without any transfer to Profit and Loss Account.

Asset Disposal Account
Debit SideRs.Credit SideRs.
To Asset A/c50,000By Provision for Depreciation A/c20,000
By Bank A/c30,000
Total50,000Total50,000

No profit or loss entry is needed.

If the Asset Is Discarded

If an asset is discarded and no money is received, there will usually be a loss equal to the book value plus any disposal expense.

Suppose an old printer costs Rs. 25,000 and accumulated depreciation is Rs. 18,000. It is discarded with no scrap value.

Book value is Rs. 7,000.

Since nothing is recovered, the loss is Rs. 7,000.

Asset Disposal Account
Debit SideRs.Credit SideRs.
To Printer A/c25,000By Provision for Depreciation A/c18,000
By Profit and Loss A/c7,000
Total25,000Total25,000

If a small scrap value is received, record it on the credit side as Bank A/c or Cash A/c.

If Provision for Depreciation Account Is Not Maintained

Some questions do not maintain a separate Provision for Depreciation Account. Instead, depreciation is credited directly to the Asset Account.

In that case, the Asset Account already shows written-down value.

The disposal may then be handled using the written-down value rather than transferring original cost and accumulated depreciation separately.

For school-level questions, read the wording carefully:

If the question saysWhat it usually means
Provision for Depreciation Account is maintainedTransfer cost and accumulated depreciation separately
Depreciation is credited to Asset AccountAsset Account already reflects reduced value
Prepare Asset Disposal AccountUse the format expected in the question

Fast Method to Check Your Answer

After preparing the Asset Disposal Account, use this quick check:

CheckQuestion to ask
CostDid I transfer only the cost of the asset disposed of?
DepreciationDid I include depreciation up to the date of disposal?
Sale proceedsDid I record the actual amount received?
ExpensesDid I deduct disposal expenses?
Profit or lossDoes the account balance after transfer to Profit and Loss Account?

This check catches most mistakes.

Common Mistakes Students Make

Mistake 1: Forgetting Depreciation Up to the Date of Sale

If the asset is sold during the year, depreciation may still be needed for the months it was used.

Ignoring this makes book value too high and changes profit or loss.

Mistake 2: Transferring Total Depreciation of All Assets

Only depreciation on the asset sold should be transferred.

If one machine is sold, transfer depreciation on that machine only.

Mistake 3: Mixing Up Profit and Loss Sides

In Asset Disposal Account:

  • profit is written on the debit side
  • loss is written on the credit side

This looks opposite at first, but it is correct because the account is being closed.

Mistake 4: Forgetting Disposal Expenses

Selling expenses, removal charges, transport charges, and auction expenses reduce the net recovery from the asset.

They are debited to Asset Disposal Account.

Mistake 5: Using Sale Value as Profit

Sale value is not profit.

Profit is the excess of net sale proceeds over book value.

For example, if an asset with book value Rs. 20,000 is sold for Rs. 23,000, profit is Rs. 3,000, not Rs. 23,000.

A Simple Step-by-Step Approach

Use this method whenever you see an Asset Disposal Account question:

  1. Identify the asset sold or discarded.
  2. Find its original cost.
  3. Calculate depreciation on that asset up to the date of disposal.
  4. Find book value.
  5. Record sale proceeds, scrap value, insurance claim, or nil recovery.
  6. Record disposal expenses, if any.
  7. Prepare Asset Disposal Account.
  8. Transfer profit or loss to Profit and Loss Account.

This sequence keeps the answer organised and reduces panic.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an Asset Disposal Account?

Asset Disposal Account is a temporary account prepared when a fixed asset is sold, discarded, exchanged, or scrapped. It helps calculate profit or loss on disposal.

Why is Asset Disposal Account prepared?

It is prepared to remove the asset’s cost and related depreciation from the books, record any sale proceeds or disposal expenses, and find profit or loss clearly.

Which side is the original cost written on?

The original cost of the asset disposed of is written on the debit side of Asset Disposal Account.

Which side is accumulated depreciation written on?

Accumulated depreciation is written on the credit side of Asset Disposal Account when a separate Provision for Depreciation Account is maintained.

Where are sale proceeds recorded?

Sale proceeds are recorded on the credit side of Asset Disposal Account. The entry is usually Bank A/c Dr. To Asset Disposal A/c.

Where are disposal expenses recorded?

Disposal expenses are recorded on the debit side of Asset Disposal Account. These expenses reduce the net amount recovered from the asset.

How is profit on disposal transferred?

Profit is transferred by debiting Asset Disposal Account and crediting Profit and Loss Account.

How is loss on disposal transferred?

Loss is transferred by debiting Profit and Loss Account and crediting Asset Disposal Account.

Is depreciation charged up to the date of sale?

Yes, if the asset is used during the current year before it is sold, depreciation is usually charged up to the date of sale before preparing the disposal account.

What happens if the asset is sold at book value?

If sale proceeds are equal to book value and there are no disposal expenses, there is no profit and no loss. The Asset Disposal Account balances without a Profit and Loss Account transfer.

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