Provision for Depreciation Account: Ledger Treatment Made Simple
Learn how Provision for Depreciation Account changes Asset Account, Depreciation Account, Balance Sheet presentation, and disposal entries.
- 11th
- Accounts
Provision for Depreciation Account is one of those topics where the calculation may be correct, but the ledger treatment still feels confusing.
The reason is simple. In basic depreciation questions, you may have learnt to credit the Asset Account directly. But when Provision for Depreciation Account is maintained, the Asset Account is not credited with depreciation every year.
Instead, depreciation is collected in a separate account.
That small change affects almost everything:
- the Asset Account
- the Depreciation Account
- the Provision for Depreciation Account
- the Balance Sheet
- the entries when the asset is sold
Once you understand the purpose of the provision account, the whole topic becomes much easier.
Think of the Asset Account as the record of what the business paid for the asset. Think of Provision for Depreciation Account as the record of how much of that cost has been used up over time.
Both are needed. They just show different things.
What Provision for Depreciation Account Means
Provision for Depreciation Account is an account that records the total depreciation charged on an asset up to a particular date.
It is also commonly called Accumulated Depreciation Account.
For example, suppose a machine was purchased for Rs. 1,00,000 and depreciation of Rs. 10,000 is charged every year.
After three years:
| Particular | Amount |
|---|---|
| Original cost of machine | Rs. 1,00,000 |
| Total depreciation for three years | Rs. 30,000 |
| Written down value | Rs. 70,000 |
If Provision for Depreciation Account is maintained:
- Machine Account can still show Rs. 1,00,000 as cost.
- Provision for Depreciation Account shows Rs. 30,000 as accumulated depreciation.
- The Balance Sheet shows the net value as Rs. 70,000.
So the business can see both the original cost and the reduced value.
This point is very important because students sometimes place it with liabilities. In the Balance Sheet, it is normally shown by deducting it from the asset.
Why a Separate Provision Account Is Used
A separate Provision for Depreciation Account is used because it gives better information.
If depreciation is credited directly to the Asset Account, the Asset Account gradually reduces. After a few years, it shows only the written down value.
That is not wrong, but it hides the original cost.
With a separate provision account, the business can see:
| Information | Where it appears |
|---|---|
| Original cost of the asset | Asset Account |
| Total depreciation already charged | Provision for Depreciation Account |
| Current book value | Balance Sheet or working note |
This is useful when there are additions, sales, exchanges, or several assets of the same type.
That one rule prevents most mistakes in this chapter.
Direct Method vs Provision Method
There are two common ways to record depreciation.
The first is the direct method. The second is the provision method.
| Point | Direct Method | Provision Method |
|---|---|---|
| Annual depreciation is credited to | Asset Account | Provision for Depreciation Account |
| Asset Account shows | Written down value | Original cost, unless there is a sale or addition |
| Separate accumulated depreciation account | Not maintained | Maintained |
| Balance Sheet presentation | Asset appears at reduced value | Asset appears at cost less provision |
The amount of depreciation does not change only because the method changes.
What changes is the place where depreciation is recorded.
Journal Entries When Provision for Depreciation Is Maintained
There are usually two entries at the end of the year.
Entry for Charging Depreciation
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Depreciation A/c Dr. | Amount of depreciation | |
| To Provision for Depreciation A/c | Amount of depreciation |
This entry records depreciation as an expense and increases the total accumulated depreciation.
Notice what is not credited here.
Asset Account is not credited.
Entry for Transferring Depreciation to Profit and Loss Account
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Profit and Loss A/c Dr. | Amount of depreciation | |
| To Depreciation A/c | Amount of depreciation |
Depreciation Account is a temporary expense account. It is closed at the end of the year by transferring it to Profit and Loss Account.
Provision for Depreciation Account is different. It is not closed every year. It carries forward its credit balance.
What Happens in Each Ledger Account
The easiest way to understand this topic is to separate the three accounts.
Asset Account
Under the provision method, Asset Account records:
- opening cost of the asset
- purchases or additions
- cost of assets sold or discarded
- closing cost of assets still held
It does not record normal annual depreciation.
If a machine is bought for Rs. 1,00,000, the Machine Account starts with Rs. 1,00,000 on the debit side. If no machine is sold, the balance may remain Rs. 1,00,000 even after depreciation is charged.
That does not mean the machine is still worth Rs. 1,00,000.
It only means the Machine Account is showing cost.
The depreciation is shown in a separate account.
Depreciation Account
Depreciation Account records only the depreciation expense for the year.
It is opened, charged, and closed within the same accounting year.
It does not show accumulated depreciation for many years.
The usual ledger movement is:
| Depreciation Account | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Debit Side | Rs. | Credit Side | Rs. |
| To Provision for Depreciation A/c | Annual depreciation | By Profit and Loss A/c | Annual depreciation |
Students often ask why Depreciation Account is debited first but then appears as “To Provision for Depreciation A/c” in the ledger.
Remember the journal entry:
Depreciation A/c Dr.
To Provision for Depreciation A/c
So Depreciation Account receives the debit. In ledger form, the opposite account name is written on the debit side.
Provision for Depreciation Account
Provision for Depreciation Account carries the total depreciation charged till date.
It usually has a credit balance.
Every year, new depreciation is added on the credit side. The closing balance is carried forward to the next year.
A simple Provision for Depreciation Account looks like this:
| Provision for Depreciation Account | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Debit Side | Rs. | Credit Side | Rs. |
| To Balance c/d | Closing accumulated depreciation | By Balance b/d | Opening accumulated depreciation |
| By Depreciation A/c | Current year’s depreciation |
In the next year, the closing balance becomes the opening balance on the credit side.
This difference is the heart of the topic.
Balance Sheet Treatment
In the Balance Sheet, the asset is shown after deducting accumulated depreciation.
The format is:
| Particulars | Amount |
|---|---|
| Asset at cost | Rs. X |
| Less: Provision for Depreciation | Rs. Y |
| Written down value | Rs. Z |
For example:
| Particulars | Amount |
|---|---|
| Machinery | Rs. 1,00,000 |
| Less: Provision for Depreciation | Rs. 20,000 |
| Machinery shown in Balance Sheet | Rs. 80,000 |
So the Balance Sheet still shows the real carrying amount, even though the Asset Account itself may show original cost.
Solved Example: Two Years of Depreciation
Suppose a machine is purchased on 1 April 2024 for Rs. 1,00,000. Depreciation is charged at 10 percent per year on cost. Accounts are closed on 31 March every year.
Depreciation each year:
| Year | Calculation | Depreciation |
|---|---|---|
| 2024-25 | 10 percent of Rs. 1,00,000 | Rs. 10,000 |
| 2025-26 | 10 percent of Rs. 1,00,000 | Rs. 10,000 |
Journal Entries for 2024-25
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Depreciation A/c Dr. | Rs. 10,000 | |
| To Provision for Depreciation A/c | Rs. 10,000 |
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Profit and Loss A/c Dr. | Rs. 10,000 | |
| To Depreciation A/c | Rs. 10,000 |
Journal Entries for 2025-26
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Depreciation A/c Dr. | Rs. 10,000 | |
| To Provision for Depreciation A/c | Rs. 10,000 |
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Profit and Loss A/c Dr. | Rs. 10,000 | |
| To Depreciation A/c | Rs. 10,000 |
Now see how the accounts behave.
Machine Account
| Machine Account | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Debit Side | Rs. | Credit Side | Rs. |
| To Bank A/c | 1,00,000 | By Balance c/d | 1,00,000 |
| Total | 1,00,000 | Total | 1,00,000 |
The Machine Account still shows cost.
Provision for Depreciation Account
| Provision for Depreciation Account | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Debit Side | Rs. | Credit Side | Rs. |
| To Balance c/d | 20,000 | By Balance b/d | 10,000 |
| By Depreciation A/c | 10,000 | ||
| Total | 20,000 | Total | 20,000 |
After two years, total depreciation is Rs. 20,000.
Balance Sheet on 31 March 2026
| Particulars | Amount |
|---|---|
| Machinery at cost | Rs. 1,00,000 |
| Less: Provision for Depreciation | Rs. 20,000 |
| Written down value | Rs. 80,000 |
This is why the method is so useful. It keeps the cost visible and still shows the reduced value.
How Additions Are Treated
If a new asset is purchased during the year, it is debited to the Asset Account.
Depreciation is then calculated according to the information in the question.
For example, suppose machinery already exists at Rs. 1,00,000 and another machine is purchased for Rs. 40,000.
The Asset Account will show:
| Machinery Account | Debit Amount |
|---|---|
| Opening machinery | Rs. 1,00,000 |
| New machinery purchased | Rs. 40,000 |
| Total cost | Rs. 1,40,000 |
Depreciation is calculated separately and credited to Provision for Depreciation Account.
The Asset Account should not be reduced for depreciation.
This order keeps the answer neat.
How Sale of an Asset Changes the Entries
Sale of an asset is where Provision for Depreciation Account becomes especially important.
When an asset is sold, the business must remove:
- the original cost of the asset sold
- the accumulated depreciation on that asset
- the sale proceeds
- the profit or loss on sale
If a separate Asset Disposal Account is prepared, the entries are usually clearer.
Transfer the Cost of the Asset Sold
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Asset Disposal A/c Dr. | Cost of asset sold | |
| To Asset A/c | Cost of asset sold |
This removes the original cost from the Asset Account.
Transfer Accumulated Depreciation on the Asset Sold
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Provision for Depreciation A/c Dr. | Depreciation on asset sold | |
| To Asset Disposal A/c | Depreciation on asset sold |
This removes the depreciation already collected for that asset.
Record Sale Proceeds
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Bank A/c Dr. | Sale value | |
| To Asset Disposal A/c | Sale value |
If the asset is sold on credit, the buyer’s account is debited instead of Bank Account.
After these entries, Asset Disposal Account is balanced. The balancing figure is profit or loss.
Solved Example: Asset Sold When Provision Account Is Maintained
Suppose a machine was bought for Rs. 80,000. Accumulated depreciation on it is Rs. 30,000. It is sold for Rs. 45,000.
First find book value:
| Particular | Amount |
|---|---|
| Cost of machine | Rs. 80,000 |
| Less: Accumulated depreciation | Rs. 30,000 |
| Book value | Rs. 50,000 |
Sale value is Rs. 45,000.
So there is a loss of Rs. 5,000.
Asset Disposal Account
| Asset Disposal Account | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Debit Side | Rs. | Credit Side | Rs. |
| To Machine A/c | 80,000 | By Provision for Depreciation A/c | 30,000 |
| By Bank A/c | 45,000 | ||
| By Profit and Loss A/c | 5,000 | ||
| Total | 80,000 | Total | 80,000 |
Loss appears on the credit side of Asset Disposal Account because it is transferred to Profit and Loss Account.
The journal entry for loss is:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Profit and Loss A/c Dr. | Rs. 5,000 | |
| To Asset Disposal A/c | Rs. 5,000 |
Notice the role of Provision for Depreciation Account. It helps remove the depreciation already charged on the machine that has been sold.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Crediting the Asset Account With Annual Depreciation
This is the most common mistake.
If Provision for Depreciation Account is maintained, the annual entry is:
Depreciation A/c Dr.
To Provision for Depreciation A/c
It is not:
Depreciation A/c Dr.
To Asset A/c
Treating Provision for Depreciation as a Liability
Provision for Depreciation is not payable to anyone.
It is deducted from the asset to show written down value.
Forgetting the Opening Balance
Provision for Depreciation Account normally has an opening balance on the credit side from the previous year.
If you forget that opening balance, your accumulated depreciation will be wrong.
Closing the Provision Account Every Year
Depreciation Account is closed every year.
Provision for Depreciation Account is carried forward.
These two accounts have different jobs.
Using Total Depreciation Instead of Depreciation on the Asset Sold
When one asset is sold, transfer only the depreciation related to that asset.
Do not transfer the provision balance of all assets unless the question says all assets are sold.
This prevents mixing the sold asset with the assets still in use.
Quick Revision Table
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Which account is credited for annual depreciation? | Provision for Depreciation Account |
| Does Asset Account reduce every year? | No, not under the provision method |
| Where is annual depreciation transferred? | Profit and Loss Account |
| What balance does Provision for Depreciation Account have? | Credit balance |
| Where is provision shown in the Balance Sheet? | Deducted from the related asset |
| What does the Asset Account usually show? | Original cost, plus additions, minus cost of assets sold |
| What does the provision account show? | Accumulated depreciation |
If you can remember this table, most ledger questions become manageable.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Provision for Depreciation Account the same as accumulated depreciation?
Yes. In school-level accounting, Provision for Depreciation Account is commonly used to show accumulated depreciation on an asset. It collects depreciation charged over the years.
Is Provision for Depreciation a liability?
No. It is not an amount payable to an outside party. It is deducted from the related asset to show the asset’s written down value.
Why is Asset Account not credited with depreciation?
Because the business wants to keep the Asset Account at original cost. Depreciation is credited to Provision for Depreciation Account instead.
What is the difference between Depreciation Account and Provision for Depreciation Account?
Depreciation Account records the depreciation expense of one year and is closed by transfer to Profit and Loss Account. Provision for Depreciation Account records total depreciation accumulated over the years and carries its balance forward.
What is the normal balance of Provision for Depreciation Account?
It normally has a credit balance because it is credited every year with depreciation.
How is Provision for Depreciation shown in the Balance Sheet?
It is deducted from the cost of the related asset. The remaining amount is the written down value of the asset.
What happens to Provision for Depreciation when an asset is sold?
The depreciation already charged on the sold asset is removed from Provision for Depreciation Account. If an Asset Disposal Account is prepared, Provision for Depreciation Account is debited and Asset Disposal Account is credited.
Does using Provision for Depreciation change the amount of depreciation?
No. The depreciation amount depends on the method, rate, cost, useful life, and date of purchase or sale. Provision for Depreciation changes the way depreciation is recorded in the books.
Looking for commerce tuitions?
Prachi is a gold-medalist commerce teacher with experience at Deloitte and KPMG. She focuses on fundamentals to build a strong foundation.