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Capital equipment is not expensed at the time of purchase and will instead be recognized as a Fixed Asset over its UEL.
Items purchased at the same time which have an aggregate value of $5,000 or more
In order for a purchase to qualify as a fixed asset, it needs to meet the threshold for cost to the University of exceeding $5,000.
Note that this does not mean a single object needs to exceed the $5,000 threshold, but a collection of purchases to be used over the same period, such as a set of library books or component parts of the same asset.
The concept of a Useful Life (commonly abbreviated as U/L) is an accounting estimate for the duration during which the asset will produce a benefit to the University. These estimates do not need to reflect a precise measure of how long we expect to use an asset, nor do they intend to forecast how long the University will have the asset. The most important benefit derived of an asset’s Useful Life is consistency for financial reporting.
The responsibility on a purchaser is to include the invoice and description of the asset on the RFP submitted to Accounts Payable so that the GL Accounting team can capitalize the assets and depreciate them appropriately according to their Useful Life.
Note that these purchases will not be expensed at the point of purchase, but over the useful lives of the assets.
Asset Tagging
An imperative control over fixed assets is physical tagging of any depreciable assets meeting the $5,000 dollar value threshold belonging to any category of property, plant & equipment. Each month, when the GL Accounting team prepares the reclass journal entry to move the expensed invoice balance to the appropriate fixed asset account, the requestor from the RFP will receive an email from General Accounting to affix a physical tag to the asset to be tracked centrally on the fixed asset schedule maintained by the GL Accounting team.
It will be the responsibility of the department requesting payment for the asset to maintain physical control of the asset and its tag.
Useful Life Schedule
Refer to the Useful Life schedule below:
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Asset Category
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Useful Life (years)
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Description
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Buildings
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30
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Physical structure owned by the University
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Building Improvements
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30
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Permanent improvements made to buildings owned by the University
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Right-of-Use Lease Asset / Liability
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Lease Term
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Ensure any lease signed (including, but not limited to buildings, equipment, machinery, etc.) is sent to generalledger@spu.edu. Recent accounting pronouncements impose additional reporting requirements that the GL accounting team will need all lease information available.
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Machinery & Equipment
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10
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Devices, audiovisual, computers, machines, equipment exceeding the dollar threshold to be described and depreciated over an estimated Useful Life.
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Vehicles
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10
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Cars, motorized carts, or any other vehicle exceeding the dollar threshold (bought or leased)
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Library Books
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20
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Any purchase of a set of library books beyond the dollar threshold
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Furniture & Fixtures
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10
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Furnishings from seats, couches, desks, tables, whiteboards, display sets, etc. whose cumulative purchase exceeds the dollar threshold
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Musical Instruments
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10
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Any musical instruments bought and owned by the University
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Artwork
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Not Depreciated
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Pursuant to ASC 958-360-35-3, artwork need not be capitalized, and an election is available to treat as artwork fixed assets similar to land.
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Land
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N/A
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The General Ledger Team is responsible for maintaining the Fixed Asset Register.