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Double Declining Balance Depreciation: Formula & Example

Marcus Sterling · July 13, 2026

Double Declining Balance Depreciation: Formula & Example

The double declining balance (DDB) method is accelerated depreciation: it charges the most expense in an asset’s early years and progressively less later. The logic — many assets genuinely lose most of their value (and usefulness) early, and DDB matches the books to that reality.

The formula

Annual depreciation = 2 × (1 ÷ Useful life) × Book value at start of year

Two things to notice: the rate is double the straight-line rate (hence the name), and it applies to the declining book value, not the original cost — which is what makes each year’s charge smaller than the last. Salvage value is not in the formula; it acts only as a floor the book value may not cross.

Full worked example

Machine cost $100,000, useful life 5 years, salvage value $10,000. Straight-line rate 20%, so DDB rate 40%:

Year Opening book value Depreciation (40%) Closing book value
1 $100,000 $40,000 $60,000
2 $60,000 $24,000 $36,000
3 $36,000 $14,400 $21,600
4 $21,600 $8,640 $12,960
5 $12,960 $2,960* $10,000

*Year 5 is capped: 40% would be $5,184, but that would breach the $10,000 salvage floor, so the charge is trimmed to land exactly on it. In practice many companies also switch to straight-line in the year straight-line on the remaining balance gives a larger charge — a standard refinement.

When DDB makes sense — and when it does not

Use it for assets that fade fast: vehicles, computers, tech equipment. Skip it for assets that serve evenly, like buildings. Strategically, DDB depresses early profit but shelters early cash (bigger tax deductions sooner) — a trade-off between reported earnings and cash flow. The accumulated result of all this lands in one balance-sheet line, unpacked in Is Accumulated Depreciation an Asset? (Contra-Asset, Explained); the spending it depreciates is Capital Expenditures (CapEx).


Why is it called double declining?

The rate is double the straight-line rate, applied to a declining book value — 40% instead of 20% for a 5-year asset.


Does salvage value appear in the DDB formula?

No — unlike straight-line, DDB ignores salvage in the calculation and uses it only as a floor that book value cannot fall below.


Can you switch from DDB to straight-line?

Yes, and it is standard practice: switch in the year straight-line on the remaining balance produces a larger deduction.


Is DDB allowed for tax purposes?

In the US, tax depreciation follows MACRS, which itself uses declining-balance mechanics for most asset classes — so the concept carries over, with prescribed rates and lives.


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