Depreciation schedule accuracy is the degree to which the assets you depreciate on your books still exist, still sit where the register records them, and still match the condition assumed when they were capitalized. Most schedules are never re-tested against those three facts after acquisition.
The schedule itself is not the weak point. The formula runs the same way every period, which is exactly the problem. It was built from a snapshot taken on capitalization day, and it runs that snapshot forward whether or not the asset behind it has changed. Fixed asset register entries do not update themselves when a machine is moved, a component is swapped, or a unit is scrapped.
Consider a manufacturer that capitalizes a packaging line at $180,000. Over three years, two drive modules fail and are replaced during routine maintenance, and one conveyor section is scrapped and never rebuilt. The physical asset on the floor is now materially different from the one on the books. The subledger still shows the original composite, and depreciation still runs on all $180,000. The number is confident. It is also wrong.
For CFOs, controllers, and fixed asset managers, the depreciation schedule is treated as one of the most reliable numbers in the close. It is often one of the least verified.
Kroll Advisory, the firm that runs 8,000 fixed asset engagements a year across 36 countries, reports that 10 to 30 percent of assets on the average fixed asset register are ghost assets that no longer physically exist. Kroll also finds that up to 65 percent of asset records contain errors, missing data, or outdated information.
Every one of those records still depreciates on schedule. The math is precise. The inputs are not. That gap between the register and the floor is where earnings quality erodes, period after period, until an audit forces the correction.
Depreciation schedules drift because the events that change an asset almost never generate the accounting entry that would update it. Four root causes do most of the damage.
Physical counts happen once a year at best. Every move, replacement, or disposal between counts is invisible to the schedule until the next cycle, if it is caught at all.
Every major ERP shares the same design constraint. The physical tracking modules for maintenance and logistics are not natively connected to the fixed asset subledger. This is true in SAP, Oracle Financials Cloud, and Microsoft Dynamics 365. It is how the platforms are built, not a setting someone forgot.
When a component is replaced or scrapped on the floor and no one files a retirement entry, the record survives its own asset. This creates partial ghost assets, where the physical unit changes but the financial record does not. IAS 16 componentization is rarely handled natively in ERP asset accounting, so depreciation keeps running on parts that are already gone.
Retirements and transfers depend on someone remembering to tell finance. Every manual step is a place where the subledger and the floor come apart.
Episodic reconciliation vs. continuous verification
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Episodic reconciliation |
Continuous verification |
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Frequency |
Annual or quarterly |
Ongoing, as work happens |
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Evidence quality |
Point-in-time count |
Multi-source, dated per asset |
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Audit readiness |
Current only right after a count |
Always current |
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Subledger accuracy |
Degrades between cycles |
Reconciled in near real time |
The cost of a stale schedule is larger than the depreciation line itself, because a phantom asset generates expense in several places at once.
Kroll's 10 to 30 percent ghost asset range is not an accounting curiosity. Each of those assets keeps depreciating, keeps accruing property tax, and keeps drawing insurance premiums until someone catches it. The PCAOB's 2024 inspection data adds the audit dimension: long-lived asset deficiencies at large firms doubled from two to four, even as overall audit deficiency rates improved from 46 percent to 39 percent. Fixed assets are the one area going the wrong direction while everything else gets better.
“A depreciation schedule is only as honest as the last time someone checked the floor. For most companies, that was a year ago, and the schedule has been quietly compounding the difference ever since.”
— Tim Harris, CEO, SoloTruth
Cost categories from an inaccurate schedule:
Our ROI model, built on Kroll, Manufacturers Alliance, and PCAOB data, points to a payback period of under six months in most cases. The figures are modeled, not customer results, but every input is drawn from verified sources. The point is less the size of any single number and more that the cost recurs every period the schedule goes unverified.
Not every approach to fixed asset verification produces a schedule you can trust. When evaluating options, look for six capabilities.
A well-run fixed asset process treats the schedule as a live record, not an annual chore.
Continuously, as part of normal operations, rather than once a year. Annual counts miss the moves, replacements, and disposals that happen between cycles and drive most schedule inaccuracy.
Because ERPs track transactions, not physical reality. The maintenance and logistics modules are not natively connected to the fixed asset subledger, so physical changes rarely reach the schedule.
A ghost asset is a record for an asset that no longer physically exists. It keeps depreciating every period, understating income and overstating carrying value until someone catches it.
A partial ghost asset occurs when a component is replaced or scrapped in the field without a journal entry. The physical asset changes, the financial record does not, and depreciation runs on parts that are gone.
PCAOB data shows long-lived asset deficiencies at large firms doubled in 2024 even as overall audit quality improved. An unverified schedule is exactly the exposure auditors are now examining more closely.
Tracking records where an asset is supposed to be. Verification proves it exists, confirms its location and condition with evidence, and reconciles that proof to the ledger.
A depreciation schedule built on a capitalization-day snapshot grows less accurate every period. A schedule built on continuous verification is a live financial record that reflects what is actually on the floor.
The difference is not the formula. It is whether the existence, location, and condition behind every asset are proven or assumed.
That is the gap SoloTruth Asset Relationship Management (ARM) is designed to close.
SoloTruth is the evidence-grade Asset Relationship Management (ARM) platform that verifies the existence, location, and condition of physical assets and reconciles that data with ERP systems. It replaces episodic audits with continuous verification using RFID, GPS, mobile inspections, and document intelligence to create a verifiable system of truth.
Book a 30-minute strategy call at calendly.com/tim-harris-solotruth/30min to see how continuous verification changes what your fixed asset register is actually capable of.
Last Updated: July 2026