Germany Depreciation (AfA): Tax Treatment of Fixed Assets
How German businesses deduct fixed assets over time using depreciation.
AfA, short for Absetzung fuer Abnutzung, spreads the cost of depreciable assets over useful life instead of deducting the full purchase immediately.
Key points
- Asset classification drives the useful life and method.
- Low-value asset rules may simplify smaller purchases.
- Tax depreciation can differ from management accounting preferences.
How to think about it in practice
Germany rewards clean records and early classification. Before applying a rate or filing position, identify the taxpayer, the income type, the place of supply or source, and whether a special regime applies. For companies, the practical tax answer often combines federal tax, municipal trade tax, VAT and payroll obligations rather than one single rate.
Rules and thresholds can change, so confirm the latest position before filing or advising. The safest workflow is to use the law and official guidance for the filing year, then document the assumptions used in the return or invoice process.
Common mistakes
- Treating withholding or payroll deductions as the final tax without checking annual assessment rules.
- Ignoring municipal trade tax or VAT because the federal income or corporation tax answer looks simple.
- Relying on translated summaries without checking the German term used by the tax office.
Bottom line
Use this guide as a map, not a substitute for advice. German tax outcomes depend on facts, dates, municipality, residence, documentation and treaty position. When money is material, confirm the position with a qualified German tax adviser.
Sources and further reading
- German Federal Ministry of Finance: Taxation
- German Federal Ministry of Finance: An ABC of Taxes
- PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries: Germany individual income tax
- Germany Trade & Invest: Corporate taxation in Germany
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