IT Asset Depreciation: How to Track and Plan for End-of-Life Assets

July 15, 2026
6 min read

Learn how to track IT asset depreciation, plan hardware end-of-life cycles, and connect retirement workflows to your ITSM process before budget surprises hit.

IT asset depreciation is one of the most overlooked disciplines in IT asset management, yet it sits at the heart of every budget cycle, hardware refresh plan, and audit conversation your organisation will face. If your team is still relying on spreadsheets or ignoring depreciation until finance asks for a number, this guide will walk you through how to track depreciation properly, how to plan for end-of-life assets before they become a problem, and how to connect that process to your broader ITSM practice.

Why IT Asset Depreciation Gets Ignored — and Why That Hurts

Most IT teams are comfortable tracking what assets they own. Far fewer have a clear, repeatable process for tracking what those assets are worth over time and when they should be retired. The gap usually comes down to three things.

First, depreciation feels like a finance problem. IT managers assume the accounting team handles it, while finance assumes IT is maintaining the authoritative asset register. In practice, both teams work from different data sources and neither picture is complete.

Second, without an automated discovery tool, asset records go stale quickly. A laptop purchased three years ago may have changed hands twice, been reimaged, or be sitting unused in a cupboard. If the record still shows it as active and fully deployed, your depreciation calculations are built on fiction.

Third, teams conflate financial depreciation with operational end-of-life planning. These are related but different. Financial depreciation is about book value. Operational end-of-life planning is about when a device stops being safe, supported, or cost-effective to run. Both matter, and a good asset management process tracks both.

The consequences of ignoring this are real: budget surprises when a wave of hardware needs replacing at once, audit findings when asset records do not match what is actually in use, and security risk when devices running unsupported operating systems stay in production because no one flagged them for retirement.

Understanding Depreciation Models for IT Assets

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You do not need to be an accountant to understand the depreciation models that affect IT asset planning. There are a few common approaches worth knowing.

Straight-Line Depreciation

This is the simplest model. An asset loses value evenly over its useful life. A laptop purchased for a set amount is written down by the same fraction each year until it reaches its residual value, usually zero. Most IT organisations use this model because it is easy to explain and easy to apply at scale.

Declining Balance Depreciation

Under this model, an asset loses a higher percentage of its remaining value in early years. This reflects the real-world pattern where hardware loses market value quickly after purchase. It is more complex to apply but gives a more accurate picture of replacement cost if you ever need to sell or trade in equipment.

Useful Life Estimates by Asset Class

Different asset types have different expected useful lives, and your depreciation schedule should reflect that.

  • Laptops and desktops: typically three to four years
  • Servers: typically four to six years
  • Networking equipment (switches, routers, access points): typically five to seven years
  • Monitors and peripherals: typically five to seven years
  • Mobile devices: typically two to three years

These are general ranges. Your actual useful life estimates should be based on vendor support timelines, your own maintenance data, and the operational demands placed on each asset class.

Building an End-of-Life Asset Planning Process

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Depreciation data is only useful if it feeds into an active planning process. End-of-life planning means knowing, well in advance, which assets are approaching retirement so you can budget for replacements, avoid service disruptions, and handle decommissioning cleanly.

Step 1 — Establish a Complete Asset Register

You cannot plan for end-of-life if you do not know what you own. Your asset register should capture, at minimum, the asset type, purchase date, purchase cost, assigned user or location, current status, and the expected end-of-life date. If your register is incomplete or out of date, this is the first problem to solve.

Automated endpoint discovery tools like Odysseus asset discovery can scan your network and populate or reconcile your asset register without relying on manual data entry. This is particularly valuable for large or distributed environments where hardware moves frequently.

Step 2 — Assign Useful Life and Depreciation Values at Purchase

The best time to record depreciation data is when an asset is first added to your register. At that point you know the purchase cost, the vendor, and the expected support lifecycle. Assign a useful life estimate and a depreciation model at intake, and the rest of the calculation can be automated.

Step 3 — Set End-of-Life Milestones and Alerts

For each asset class, define the milestones that matter.

  • Vendor end-of-support date for the operating system or firmware
  • Internal end-of-life date based on your useful life estimate
  • Warranty expiry date
  • Lease return date if applicable

Your ITSM platform should surface these milestones as alerts well before the date arrives, not after. A twelve-month warning gives you time to budget. A thirty-day warning gives you a crisis.

Step 4 — Connect End-of-Life Planning to the Change Process

Retiring an asset is a change. Decommissioning a server, returning a leased device, or wiping and disposing of a laptop all carry risk if they are not managed through a proper change workflow. Your end-of-life planning process should feed directly into your change management queue so that retirements are scheduled, approved, and recorded.

Step 5 — Update the CMDB at Retirement

When an asset is retired, the record needs to be closed out properly in your configuration management database. Leaving retired assets as active configuration items creates noise in your CMDB, skews your depreciation reports, and can cause incidents when someone tries to assign work to a device that no longer exists.

Step 6 — Review and Refresh Your Useful Life Estimates Annually

Technology changes. A useful life estimate that was accurate three years ago may not reflect current vendor support timelines or your organisation's actual failure patterns. Review your estimates at least annually and adjust your depreciation schedules accordingly.

Connecting Depreciation Data to IT Budget Planning

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One of the most practical applications of good depreciation tracking is budget forecasting. When you know the depreciation curve for every asset class and the volume of assets approaching end-of-life in the next one to three years, you can build a hardware refresh budget that finance will actually trust.

This means moving away from the reactive model where IT asks for emergency budget because a wave of laptops all failed at once, and toward a planned model where refresh cycles are predictable and funded in advance.

A few practices that help here.

  • Group assets by purchase cohort so you can see when large batches will hit end-of-life simultaneously
  • Build a rolling three-year replacement forecast that is updated quarterly
  • Factor in the cost of extended support contracts when assets run past their standard useful life, as these can be significant for server operating systems in particular
  • Include disposal costs in your planning, whether that is secure data wiping, certified e-waste disposal, or trade-in logistics

Common Mistakes in IT Asset Depreciation Tracking

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Even teams that take depreciation seriously tend to make a handful of recurring mistakes.

  • Treating purchase date as the start of depreciation rather than the in-service date. An asset that sat in a warehouse for three months before deployment should start its depreciation clock at deployment.
  • Using a single useful life estimate for all hardware regardless of type. A server running critical workloads and a general-purpose laptop have very different profiles.
  • Failing to update asset records when hardware is upgraded. Adding memory or replacing a drive does not reset the depreciation clock, but it may extend the useful life estimate. This distinction matters.
  • Keeping retired assets in the active register. This inflates your asset count, distorts your depreciation reports, and creates confusion during audits.
  • Ignoring software assets entirely. Software licences have their own lifecycle, often tied to vendor support timelines that do not align with your hardware refresh cycles. A machine approaching hardware end-of-life may be running software that is still under active support, or vice versa.

Key Takeaways

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IT asset depreciation is not just an accounting exercise. When it is done well, it gives IT leaders the data they need to plan hardware refreshes, avoid budget surprises, pass audits, and retire assets cleanly before they become a security or operational liability.

  • Use a consistent depreciation model across each asset class and document it
  • Capture useful life estimates and purchase data at the point of intake, not retrospectively
  • Set milestone alerts for warranty expiry, vendor end-of-support, and internal end-of-life dates
  • Connect retirement workflows to your change management process so decommissioning is controlled
  • Keep your CMDB clean by closing out retired assets promptly
  • Build a rolling multi-year replacement forecast and review it regularly

The TIKTING service management platform supports asset lifecycle tracking alongside your ITSM workflows, so depreciation milestones, retirement approvals, and CMDB updates all happen in one place. Odysseus asset discovery keeps your asset register accurate by continuously scanning your environment and surfacing devices that may have been missed or gone stale — so your depreciation data reflects what is actually in use, not what was recorded at purchase three years ago.

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