What is salvage value in depreciation?

Salvage value is the estimated residual value of an asset at the end of its useful life. It represents what the asset can be sold for after depreciation. In accounting, it is subtracted from the asset’s cost to calculate total depreciable amount, helping determine periodic depreciation expense accurately.
 
Salvage value (residual value) is the estimated amount an asset will be worth at the end of its useful life. In depreciation, it’s subtracted from the asset’s cost to determine the total amount that can be depreciated over time.
 
Salvage value in depreciation is the estimated residual value of an asset at the end of its useful life. It is the amount a company expects to recover when selling or disposing of the asset. Depreciation is calculated by subtracting salvage value from the asset’s original cost.
 
Salvage value (also called residual value) is the estimated amount you expect to get when you sell or dispose of an asset at the end of its useful life; in depreciation, it’s important because you only depreciate the asset’s cost minus this salvage value for example, if a machine costs $1,00,000 and you expect to sell it for $10,000 later, you depreciate $90,000 over its life.
 
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