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Fixed Asset Management & Verification Reviews

Most companies discover their fixed asset register is wrong at the worst possible time — during a statutory audit query, a bank's stock-and-asset inspection, an insurance claim after a fire or flood, or a due diligence exercise before a sale.

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Most companies discover their fixed asset register is wrong at the worst possible time — during a statutory audit query, a bank's stock-and-asset inspection, an insurance claim after a fire or flood, or a due diligence exercise before a sale. Assets get scrapped without a journal entry, transferred between locations without a paper trail, quietly written off by a site manager, or simply never tagged in the first place. PNPC Global has built and cleaned up fixed asset registers, run physical verification cycles, and reconciled book records to ground reality for manufacturing units, hospitals, educational institutions, and multi-location service businesses since 1986. We treat the fixed asset register as a live operational control — not a spreadsheet that exists only to satisfy the auditor once a year.

What it costs

Govt. feesGovernment & statutory fees as applicable to your case
Professional feeFixed professional fee — confirmed in writing before we start

No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.

What Fixed Asset Management & Verification Reviews is

Fixed Asset Management & Verification is the discipline of maintaining an accurate, complete, and reconciled record of every tangible and intangible capital asset a business owns — land, buildings, plant and machinery, furniture and fixtures, vehicles, computers, and software licences — and periodically confirming that the physical assets on the ground actually match what the books say exists. It has two distinct but connected components. The first is the fixed asset register itself: a structured record capturing each asset's description, location, cost, date of capitalisation, useful life, depreciation method, accumulated depreciation, and net carrying value, maintained in a manner consistent with Schedule II of the Companies Act 2013 (for companies) and, where applicable, Ind AS 16 (Property, Plant and Equipment) or the corresponding Accounting Standard AS 10. The second is physical verification — the periodic, evidence-based exercise of walking the floor, tagging or scanning each asset, and confirming its existence, location, condition, and continued use against the register.

Physical verification of fixed assets is not merely good practice — it is embedded in statutory audit requirements. Under the Companies (Auditor's Report) Order, 2020 (CARO 2020), the statutory auditor of a company is required to report whether the company has maintained proper records showing full particulars of Property, Plant and Equipment, including quantitative details and situation, and whether these assets have been physically verified by the management at reasonable intervals, with material discrepancies (if any) properly dealt with in the books of account. A company that cannot produce a reconciled register and verification evidence when the auditor asks receives an adverse or qualified CARO remark — a red flag that follows the company into every subsequent audit, bank renewal, and investor due diligence review.

The reasons fixed asset registers drift from reality are structurally predictable. Assets get physically scrapped, sold as scrap, or discarded by a plant or site team without the disposal being routed through accounts — so the register still carries a machine that has not existed for three years. Assets get moved between plants, branches, or departments informally, so the register shows a laptop in Chennai that has actually been in the Hyderabad office since last year. Capital work-in-progress gets capitalised late or with the wrong classification, distorting both the depreciation charge and the useful-life assumptions applied. Assets purchased in bulk — furniture, computers, tools — get recorded as a single lump-sum line item with no individual tagging, making it operationally impossible to verify "the register" against "the floor" at an item level. And depreciation itself is frequently miscalculated — wrong useful life applied under Schedule II, wrong residual value assumption, or a failure to reassess useful life and impairment where Ind AS 16 or Ind AS 36 requires it for larger companies.

The commercial cost of an unreliable asset register compounds over time. Insurance claims get rejected or reduced because the insured schedule of assets does not match what was actually destroyed or damaged. Banks financing against a hypothecation or mortgage of fixed assets discover, at inspection, assets that no longer exist or were never where the register said — triggering a covenant breach or a reduced credit limit. Income-tax depreciation claims on the block of assets get disallowed on assets that cannot be evidenced as existing and in use. Buyers in an M&A due diligence process discount the asking valuation, or walk away entirely, when the fixed asset register cannot be reconciled to the balance sheet figure. A disciplined verification and reconciliation cycle — done proactively, not only when an auditor or bank forces the issue — closes this gap before it becomes a liability on someone else's balance sheet review.

When a fixed asset management & verification engagement adds real value

Statutory audit under the Companies Act is approaching and the company cannot currently produce a reconciled register with verification evidence to support a clean CARO 2020 remark on Property, Plant and Equipment

The business has multiple manufacturing plants, branches, warehouses, or offices and has never run a coordinated, simultaneous physical verification across all locations

Bank facilities are secured by a hypothecation or mortgage of plant, machinery, or other fixed assets, and the bank has flagged the asset register at the last renewal or inspection

The company is preparing for a fundraise, sale, or M&A transaction and needs the fixed asset register to withstand buyer or investor due diligence scrutiny

A fire, flood, theft, or other loss event has occurred, and an accurate, evidenced fixed asset schedule is required to support an insurance claim

Depreciation has clearly been miscalculated for several years — useful lives applied inconsistently with Schedule II, wrong opening balances carried forward, or capital work-in-progress capitalised incorrectly

A new CFO, promoter, or management team has taken over and wants an independent baseline verification before relying on inherited records

The business is growing quickly and adding assets across new locations faster than the accounting team's manual tracking discipline can keep up with

An internal audit, statutory audit, or bank inspection has already raised a qualified observation on fixed assets and management needs a structured remediation programme, not just a one-time patch

What this engagement is not, and where a different service fits better

Not a substitute for the statutory audit itself — physical verification and register clean-up support the auditor's CARO 2020 reporting, but the statutory audit under Section 143 of the Companies Act remains a separate, mandatory annual engagement

Not a fixed asset revaluation or fair value exercise for merger, acquisition, or IPO purposes — that is a distinct valuation engagement requiring a registered valuer under the Companies Act or IBBI framework, not a verification review

Not a substitute for a bank-commissioned stock and asset audit conducted by the bank's own empanelled auditor as a condition of a working capital facility — those are separately scoped, though PNPC's internal register and verification work materially improves outcomes at such external audits

Not appropriate as a one-time exercise for a business expecting lasting assurance — a fixed asset register drifts from reality again within a year or two without periodic re-verification and a disciplined addition/disposal capture process

Not a forensic investigation — if missing or misappropriated assets are already suspected with specific evidence pointing to fraud, a forensic audit engagement with an investigative mandate is the more appropriate starting point

Not needed at this level of formality for a very small business with a handful of easily-observed assets and no bank facility, audit requirement, or investor scrutiny — a lighter internal checklist may suffice until the business scales

Structure Comparison

Fixed Asset Management & Verification vs related audit and advisory engagements

FeatureFixed Asset Verification & Register Clean-upStatutory Audit (Companies Act)Bank Stock & Asset AuditAsset Valuation (Registered Valuer)Forensic AuditInternal Audit (Sec 138)
Primary objectiveReconcile physical assets to book register; build/clean the FARTrue-and-fair opinion on financial statementsConfirm assets securing a bank facility exist and are adequateDetermine fair value of assets for a specific purposeInvestigate suspected fraud or asset misappropriationSystematic risk-based control review
Typical mandateContractual — management or Board commissionedCompanies Act 2013, Section 143 — mandatoryBank's loan/facility covenant — mandated by lenderCompanies Act 2013 / IBBI, where a formal valuation is requiredContractual — triggered by suspicion or disputeCompanies Act 2013, Section 138 (class-based)
FrequencyTypically annual, or aligned to audit cycle; higher-risk categories more oftenAnnual, after year-endAs per bank covenant — often annual or half-yearlyOne-time, for the specific transaction or eventOne-time, triggered by an eventAnnual, per Board-approved risk-based plan
Reports toManagement / Audit Committee / statutory auditor as supporting evidenceShareholders (via AGM) and RoCThe financing bankThe company / transaction counterpartiesBoard / Audit Committee / legal counselAudit Committee / Board
Governing frameworkSchedule II Companies Act 2013, Ind AS 16 / AS 10, CARO 2020Standards on Auditing (SA) under Companies ActBank's internal stock audit policy / RBI prudential normsCompanies Act Sec 247, IBBI Valuation RulesNo single mandatory standard; ICAI forensic guidance notesICAI Standards on Internal Audit (SIA)
OutputReconciled Fixed Asset Register, verification report, exception listAuditor's Report under Sec 143 + CARO 2020Stock and asset audit report to the bankRegistered valuer's report with fair value opinionForensic investigation report, often litigation-readyInternal audit report to Audit Committee
Filed with regulator/RoCNo — internal management and audit-support documentYes — annexed to AOC-4 filed with RoCNo — submitted to the bank directlySometimes — filed with RoC/NCLT depending on purposeNo — internal, unless referred to authoritiesNo — internal Board/Audit Committee record

These engagements are complementary. A reconciled fixed asset register and a documented verification cycle are the evidentiary base the statutory auditor relies on for the CARO 2020 remark, the base a bank's own stock auditor will test against, and the base a registered valuer will start from if a formal valuation is later required. PNPC scopes the right combination for your entity type, lending relationships, and reporting calendar during the initial consultation.

How it works
#Stage & What PNPC DoesCA Advice Portals Never GiveTimeline
1Scoping Consultation — Understanding the actual state of the register todayWe start with the questions a generic quote skips: does a fixed asset register exist at all, in what format, when was it last verified, how many locations hold assets, is any facility bank-financed against a hypothecation of these assets, and is a statutory audit or transaction deadline driving the timeline? The answers determine whether this is a full register rebuild or a targeted verification and reconciliation of an existing record.Week 1
2Existing Records & Depreciation Policy ReviewBefore any physical work begins, we review the existing FAR (if one exists), the depreciation policy applied, useful lives adopted against Schedule II Part C rates, and prior audit qualifications on Property, Plant and Equipment. A register cannot be reconciled to a standard that was never correctly applied in the first place — we fix the standard before testing adherence to it.Week 1–2
3Asset Categorisation & Coding Framework DesignWe design (or validate) an asset coding structure — by location, category, department, and cost centre — that makes future verification cycles fast rather than a fresh forensic exercise every time. Bulk-purchased items (furniture batches, computer batches) are broken into individually trackable units wherever the value justifies it, rather than left as an unverifiable lump sum.Week 2
4Physical Tagging — Barcode or QR tagging of individual assetsEach asset above the materiality threshold set with management is physically tagged with a unique identifier linked to the register. This is the single step that converts "verification" from a subjective walk-through into a repeatable, evidence-based exercise year after year — most businesses skip it and pay for that decision every audit cycle.Week 2–4, scaled to asset count and location spread
5Physical Verification — Location-by-location floor walk against the registerWe physically walk every location in scope, matching each tagged asset to the register entry — description, location, condition, and continued use — rather than relying on a departmental self-certification. This is where assets that were scrapped without a journal entry, quietly transferred, or never existed as recorded come to light.Week 3–6, depending on number and spread of locations
6Exception Reporting — Assets in the register but not on the floor, and vice versaEvery mismatch is documented individually: assets on the register with no physical trace (candidates for write-off), assets found on the floor with no register entry (candidates for capitalisation or expensing, depending on materiality and nature), and assets found at a different location than recorded (transfer to be regularised).Week 5–6
7Management Discussion & Root Cause ReviewWe discuss each exception with the relevant site or department head before finalising treatment — was an asset genuinely scrapped and simply never recorded, or is there a control gap in how disposals are authorised and communicated to accounts? Recommendations address the root cause, not just the current-year discrepancy.Week 6
8Depreciation Recomputation & Book ReconciliationWhere useful lives, residual values, or capitalisation dates were incorrectly applied, we recompute depreciation on a corrected basis and quantify the prior-period impact, working with management and the statutory auditor on the appropriate accounting treatment (prior period adjustment versus current-year catch-up, per applicable Ind AS/AS).Week 6–7
9Write-off, Write-back & Journal Entry SupportWe prepare the supporting schedules and board note for assets requiring write-off (missing, scrapped, obsolete) and assets requiring capitalisation (found but unrecorded), so the accounts team can pass correctly authorised journal entries rather than silent adjustments with no audit trail.Week 7
10Reconciled Fixed Asset Register — Final deliverableThe final FAR reconciles to the trial balance and the audited financial statements, with each asset carrying its unique tag ID, location, cost, accumulated depreciation, net book value, and last-verified date — ready to be handed directly to the statutory auditor as supporting evidence for the CARO 2020 PPE clause.Week 7–8
11Insurance Schedule Cross-check (if applicable)Where the company carries an asset or fire/burglary insurance policy, we cross-check the insured schedule of assets against the reconciled register — a mismatch here means either over-insurance (wasted premium) or under-insurance (a claim shortfall risk after a loss event) that most businesses never discover until a claim is actually filed.Week 8 — as applicable
12Statutory Auditor CoordinationWe share the reconciled register, verification methodology, and exception log directly with the statutory auditor ahead of year-end fieldwork — reducing audit queries, audit fee escalation from unresolved PPE issues, and the risk of a qualified CARO remark that follows the company into next year's audit and every bank renewal in between.Aligned to audit timeline
13Annual Verification Cycle & Addition/Disposal ProtocolA one-time clean-up drifts out of date again within a year without a disciplined ongoing process. We help design (or run, on an ongoing retainer) a lighter annual or half-yearly verification cycle and a simple addition/disposal capture protocol so every future asset movement is recorded at the time it happens, not reconstructed a year later.Ongoing, annually thereafter

A first-time full register rebuild and verification for a multi-location manufacturing business typically runs 6–10 weeks depending on asset count, number of locations, and the condition of the starting records. A lighter annual re-verification for a business with an existing tagged register and clean prior-year baseline can often be completed in 2–4 weeks. Engagements aligned to a statutory audit deadline are scheduled to complete verification fieldwork well ahead of year-end audit fieldwork.

Document Checklist
Existing Records & Accounting Documents

Existing fixed asset register (in whatever format currently maintained — spreadsheet, accounting software export, or manual ledger)

Latest audited financial statements and the fixed asset / depreciation schedule (Note to Accounts) from the last 2–3 years

Depreciation policy note — useful lives applied by asset category, residual value assumption, and method (straight-line or written-down value)

Trial balance and general ledger extracts for all fixed asset and accumulated depreciation accounts

Details of any capital work-in-progress (CWIP) and the basis on which items have been (or are pending) capitalisation

Prior statutory audit reports, CARO annexures, and any qualified or adverse remarks specifically relating to Property, Plant and Equipment

Purchase & Capitalisation Evidence

Purchase invoices, purchase orders, and capitalisation vouchers for major additions in the review period

Import documentation (bill of entry, customs duty paid) for imported plant and machinery, where applicable

Installation and commissioning records for plant and machinery, establishing the actual date put to use

GST input tax credit records relating to capital goods, to cross-check against capitalised asset cost

Loan or lease agreements for any assets acquired under finance lease, hire purchase, or asset-backed borrowing

Location & Site Access Documents

List of all locations holding fixed assets — factories, warehouses, branch offices, site offices, and any assets held at a third party's premises (job-work vendors, C&F agents)

Site access and safety induction requirements for verification staff visiting factory floors or restricted areas

Point of contact at each location authorised to accompany the verification team and confirm asset details on the ground

Lease or ownership documents for premises where fixed assets — particularly leasehold improvements and fit-outs — are located

Disposal, Transfer & Insurance Records

Records of any assets scrapped, sold, discarded, or written off during the period under review, with supporting board approval or management authorisation where available

Inter-location or inter-department asset transfer records, formal or informal, including any gate passes or delivery challans used internally

Current asset or fire/burglary insurance policy and the insured schedule of assets, for cross-checking against the reconciled register

Any insurance claims filed in the review period relating to fixed asset loss or damage, and the supporting schedules submitted

Banking & Financing Documents (where facilities are secured by assets)

Hypothecation or mortgage deed / sanction letter describing the specific assets charged as security to the bank or NBFC

Latest bank stock and asset audit report (if the bank commissions one) and any observations raised by the bank's auditor

Charge registration details (Form CHG-1 / CHG-9) filed with the Registrar of Companies for secured assets, where applicable

Corporate & Governance Documents

Certificate of Incorporation and latest MoA/AoA, or the equivalent constitutional document for the entity type

Board resolution or management authorisation commissioning the verification exercise, and defining the materiality threshold for individual asset tagging

Organisation chart identifying the finance/accounts team member responsible for maintaining the fixed asset register going forward

Any internal SOP already in place for capital expenditure approval, asset tagging, and disposal authorisation

Ongoing obligations
PhaseTriggered ByPNPC CA GuidanceRisk If Ignored
Register Build / Clean-upNo reliable FAR exists, or it has materially drifted from physical realityFull asset categorisation, coding framework design, physical tagging, and floor-to-book reconciliation to produce a register that ties to the trial balance and can be handed to the statutory auditor as supporting evidence.Statutory audit qualification under CARO 2020 on Property, Plant and Equipment; unreliable depreciation and net block figures flowing into every subsequent financial statement.
First Full Physical VerificationRegister exists but has never been independently verified against the floorLocation-by-location physical count and condition check against the register, with an exception list documenting missing, unrecorded, or misplaced assets, discussed with each site owner before final treatment.Assets scrapped or transferred without a paper trail accumulate silently; income-tax depreciation claims on the block of assets become vulnerable to disallowance on assets that cannot be evidenced as existing.
Annual Verification CycleFinancial year-end approaching, ahead of statutory audit fieldworkA lighter, recurring verification — often on a rolling or sample basis for lower-risk categories and full coverage for high-value plant and machinery — timed to complete before the statutory auditor's year-end fieldwork begins.Recurring CARO qualifications; audit fee escalation as the auditor spends more time resolving unreconciled PPE queries every year instead of once.
Bank Facility Renewal / InspectionWorking capital or term loan secured against hypothecated or mortgaged fixed assetsRegister and verification evidence prepared and shared proactively ahead of the bank's own stock and asset audit, reducing the risk of an adverse bank auditor observation that triggers a covenant review or reduced facility limit.Bank-side asset audit discovers assets that no longer exist or were never at the stated location, triggering a covenant breach, facility limit reduction, or additional security demand.
Insurance Renewal or Claim EventAnnual policy renewal, or a fire/flood/theft loss eventInsured schedule of assets cross-checked against the reconciled register before renewal, and the register used as primary supporting evidence if a claim needs to be filed after a loss event.Under-insurance discovered only after a loss, resulting in a reduced claim payout; over-insurance wastes premium year after year without anyone noticing.
M&A / Fundraise Due DiligenceInvestor term sheet, acquisition interest, or planned sale of the businessRegister reconciled and verification-current well ahead of buyer or investor due diligence, with a clean exception history, so PPE is not a negotiating point used to discount the valuation.Unreconciled fixed asset register becomes a due diligence red flag; buyers discount the offer or delay closing while the register is fixed under time pressure and reduced leverage.
Asset Disposal / Write-off EventPlant modernisation, obsolescence, damage, or scrapping decisionDisposal routed through a documented authorisation and journal entry at the time it happens — not discovered a year later during the next verification cycle — with correct treatment of any profit or loss on disposal and applicable GST implications on sale of capital goods.Undocumented disposals distort the register for years; GST on disposal of capital goods (where applicable) missed, creating a future demand and interest exposure.
Leadership or Ownership TransitionNew CFO, promoter, or management team takes chargeAn independent baseline verification commissioned early in the transition, so incoming leadership relies on a confirmed asset position rather than inherited records of unknown reliability.Incoming management unknowingly certifies financial statements or bank declarations based on a fixed asset position that does not reflect ground reality.
Frequently asked
What exactly is a fixed asset register, and why does it matter beyond the balance sheet?

A fixed asset register (FAR) is the detailed underlying record behind the single Property, Plant and Equipment figure shown on the balance sheet — listing every individual asset with its description, location, cost, capitalisation date, useful life, depreciation method, accumulated depreciation, and net carrying value. It matters beyond the balance sheet because it is the evidence base for the statutory auditor's CARO 2020 remark, the document a bank's stock auditor tests against if assets secure a loan, the schedule an insurer relies on for a claim, and the record a buyer's due diligence team scrutinises before an acquisition.

Practitioner noteWe regularly see companies where the balance sheet PPE figure is a plug that was never actually reconciled to a detailed asset-by-asset list. That gap is invisible until someone — an auditor, a bank, a buyer — asks for the detail behind the number.
Is physical verification of fixed assets legally mandatory?

For companies, it is embedded in statutory audit requirements rather than being a standalone statute. Under CARO 2020 (Companies (Auditor's Report) Order, 2020), the statutory auditor is required to report whether the company has maintained proper records of Property, Plant and Equipment showing full particulars including quantitative details and location, whether these have been physically verified by management at reasonable intervals, and whether any material discrepancies noticed on verification have been properly dealt with in the books. In practice, this makes periodic physical verification a de facto requirement for any company wanting a clean audit report.

Practitioner note'Reasonable intervals' is not defined with a fixed number in CARO — but a company that has never verified its fixed assets, or last did so several years ago, will struggle to satisfy an auditor asking this question directly.
What happens if the statutory auditor finds the fixed asset register cannot be reconciled?

The auditor is likely to issue a qualified or adverse remark under the CARO 2020 clause on Property, Plant and Equipment, noting that proper records were not maintained or that physical verification was not carried out at reasonable intervals. This qualification appears in the audit report attached to the AOC-4 filing, which is a public document on the MCA record — visible to banks, credit rating agencies, and any counterparty who checks the company's filing history.

Practitioner noteA CARO qualification on fixed assets is one of the more avoidable qualifications a company can pick up — unlike a genuine going-concern or fraud-related qualification, it is almost always a fixable process gap, not a fundamental business problem.
How often should a business physically verify its fixed assets?

There is no single statutory frequency prescribed for all businesses, but common practice — and what most statutory auditors expect to see evidenced — is at least an annual verification cycle, timed to complete ahead of year-end audit fieldwork. High-value or high-movement categories (vehicles, portable equipment, IT assets that move between users) often warrant more frequent checks; low-movement categories like buildings and heavy fixed plant can reasonably be verified on a longer cycle once a clean baseline is established.

Practitioner noteWe calibrate frequency to risk, not a blanket annual rule for every asset category — verifying a building every quarter adds cost without adding assurance, while verifying laptops only once every two years usually misses a meaningful number that have quietly left the organisation.
What is CARO 2020 and how does it specifically relate to fixed assets?

The Companies (Auditor's Report) Order, 2020 is a statutory order under Section 143(11) of the Companies Act 2013 requiring auditors of specified companies to report on a prescribed set of additional matters beyond the standard true-and-fair opinion. Clause (i) of CARO 2020 specifically requires the auditor to comment on whether the company maintains proper records of Property, Plant and Equipment with full particulars including quantitative details and location, whether it has a programme of physical verification at reasonable intervals commensurate with the size of the company and the nature of its assets, and whether any material discrepancies noticed have been properly dealt with in the books.

Practitioner noteCARO also asks specifically about title deeds of immovable property being held in the company's name — a related but separate check we build into the same engagement where relevant, since title deed discrepancies are a common companion finding to asset register gaps.
What is the difference between an operational audit and a fixed asset verification review?

An operational audit examines the efficiency and control quality of a business function or process more broadly — procurement, inventory, dispatch, treasury. Fixed asset verification is narrower and more specific: it tests whether the physical capital assets recorded on the books actually exist, are where the register says, and are correctly valued. In practice the two often overlap — a broader operational audit of the procurement-to-capitalisation cycle may include fixed asset verification as one component — but a standalone fixed asset engagement can be commissioned on its own, independent of a wider operational review.

Practitioner noteBusinesses that already run a broader internal or operational audit programme sometimes assume fixed assets are automatically covered. Ask specifically whether physical verification of PPE, at asset level, is actually within the current audit scope — it is often assumed rather than confirmed.
We have never tagged our assets. Is barcode or QR tagging actually necessary, or is a spreadsheet enough?

A spreadsheet alone works only as long as someone can reliably match a physical item on the floor to a specific row in that spreadsheet — which becomes practically impossible once you have more than a small handful of similar-looking assets (identical desks, identical machines, identical laptops) across more than one location. Physical tagging with a unique identifier — barcode, QR code, or an engraved asset number — converts verification from a subjective, error-prone walk-through into a fast, repeatable, evidence-based exercise every subsequent year.

Practitioner noteThe upfront cost of tagging is almost always recovered within the first repeat verification cycle, purely from the time saved not re-identifying assets from scratch. We recommend it for any business with more than a modest asset count spread across even two locations.
What is Schedule II of the Companies Act 2013 and how does it govern depreciation?

Schedule II to the Companies Act 2013 prescribes the useful lives to be applied for computing depreciation on various classes of tangible fixed assets — plant and machinery, buildings, furniture and fixtures, vehicles, office equipment, and computers, among others — replacing the earlier rate-based approach under the 1956 Act with a useful-life-based approach. Companies are required to depreciate assets over the useful life specified in Schedule II (or a technically justified different useful life, disclosed and justified in the financial statements) rather than applying arbitrary depreciation rates.

Practitioner noteWe frequently find companies still applying old Companies Act 1956 depreciation rates or generic income-tax rates to their books, years after Schedule II came into force. This misstates net book value and can trigger an audit query on its own, separate from any physical verification finding.
Does the fixed asset register need to follow Ind AS 16, or is Schedule II sufficient?

It depends on which financial reporting framework the company follows. Companies mandatorily applying Indian Accounting Standards (Ind AS) — based on net worth, listing status, and other prescribed thresholds under the Companies (Indian Accounting Standards) Rules — must account for Property, Plant and Equipment under Ind AS 16, including its more detailed requirements on component accounting, periodic review of useful life and residual value, and impairment testing under Ind AS 36. Companies not covered by Ind AS follow Accounting Standard AS 10 (Property, Plant and Equipment) under the existing Companies (Accounting Standards) Rules, with Schedule II governing useful lives in either case for Companies Act reporting purposes.

Practitioner noteWe confirm which framework applies to a company at the very start of the engagement — building a register under the wrong framework's disclosure and component-accounting requirements creates rework that is entirely avoidable with a five-minute check upfront.
What is component accounting under Ind AS 16, and does it apply to us?

Component accounting requires that where a single asset has significant parts with materially different useful lives — for example, a building's structure versus its lifts, or a machine versus its major replaceable component — each significant component is depreciated separately over its own useful life, rather than the whole asset being depreciated as one block. It applies to companies reporting under Ind AS, and is a common source of restatement when a fixed asset register built under the older, simpler approach is later reviewed against Ind AS requirements.

Practitioner noteComponent accounting is one of the more technically involved parts of an Ind AS transition. We flag early in the scoping call whether a company's asset base — large plant, buildings with significant fit-outs — is likely to need this treatment, since it changes both the register structure and the depreciation computation.
An asset was scrapped years ago but is still on our books. What do we do?

The asset should be written off from the books through a properly authorised journal entry, supported by evidence of the disposal (even if reconstructed after the fact — management confirmation, photographs if available, or a documented internal note explaining the circumstances), with the resulting profit or loss on disposal (if any) recognised in that period's income statement in line with applicable accounting standards. Where GST implications on disposal of capital goods are relevant, those need to be assessed and addressed as part of the regularisation.

Practitioner noteBackdating a disposal entry to the actual scrap date, versus recording it in the current period with disclosure, is a judgement call that depends on materiality and the auditor's view. We work this through with the client's statutory auditor rather than making a unilateral accounting call — it is their opinion the client ultimately needs.
We found equipment on the floor that has no record in our fixed asset register at all. What now?

This typically happens with assets purchased in bulk and lumped into a single generic line item, assets received free of cost or as part of a larger contract, or assets that were expensed rather than capitalised at the time of purchase because their individual cost fell below an internal capitalisation threshold. Each case needs individual assessment: genuinely capital items should be capitalised (potentially as a prior-period adjustment depending on materiality and timing), while items correctly expensed under the company's capitalisation policy simply need to be added to a lighter operational asset tracking list, even if they do not sit on the formal FAR.

Practitioner noteA clear, board-approved capitalisation threshold (for example, items above a certain rupee value are capitalised; below it, expensed) removes most of this ambiguity going forward. Many companies we work with have never formally set one.
How does fixed asset verification interact with our bank's stock and asset audit?

Banks financing working capital or term loans against hypothecated or mortgaged fixed assets typically commission their own periodic stock and asset audit through an empanelled auditor, independent of the company's own internal processes. A company that maintains a well-reconciled, currently-verified fixed asset register generally has a materially smoother bank audit — fewer queries, faster turnaround, and a lower risk of an adverse observation that could affect facility renewal terms or the sanctioned limit.

Practitioner noteWe have seen bank stock auditors flag assets that had actually been correctly scrapped years earlier simply because the company's own records were never updated to reflect it — an entirely avoidable observation that a proactive internal reconciliation would have prevented before the bank auditor ever walked in.
Can fixed asset discrepancies affect our income-tax depreciation claim?

Yes. Depreciation is an allowable deduction under the income-tax law's block-of-assets provisions, but the deduction depends on the asset being owned by the assessee and actually used for business purposes during the relevant year. An asset that has been scrapped, sold, or otherwise ceased to exist, but continues to be shown in the block of assets and depreciated for tax purposes, creates an exposure if scrutinised — the tax authorities can disallow depreciation claimed on assets that cannot be evidenced as existing and in use.

Practitioner noteThe income-tax block of assets concept (where individual assets within a category are pooled) makes this less immediately visible than under Companies Act reporting, but the underlying exposure is real and surfaces during a tax assessment or scrutiny, not just a statutory audit. Section numbering under the income-tax law has been renumbered with the transition to the Income Tax Act, 2025 — we confirm the current section reference applicable at the time of the engagement rather than relying on a fixed citation.
What is the difference between a fixed asset verification review and a formal asset valuation?

A verification review confirms existence, location, condition, and reconciles the register to the books — it does not determine fair value. A formal asset valuation is a distinct engagement, typically required for a merger, acquisition, IPO, or specific regulatory purpose under the Companies Act or IBBI framework, and must be conducted by a Registered Valuer empanelled under the applicable rules. PNPC's verification and register clean-up work is complementary groundwork — a reconciled, accurate register makes a subsequent formal valuation faster and more defensible, but the two are separately scoped and separately delivered engagements.

Practitioner noteDo not assume a verification review produces a valuation figure your bank, investor, or transaction counterparty can rely on for pricing purposes — if a fair value opinion is needed, that requires a separate registered valuer engagement, which we can help arrange.
How does PNPC decide the materiality threshold for individually tagging assets?

We work this out with management at the scoping stage, based on the company's own capitalisation policy, asset base composition, and practical cost-benefit — tagging every low-value item individually (a stapler, a plastic chair) rarely justifies the effort, while any asset that is individually significant in value, is portable and therefore movement-prone, or secures a bank facility, generally warrants individual tagging regardless of its absolute rupee value.

Practitioner noteWe typically recommend tagging based on a combination of value and mobility risk, not value alone — a ₹15,000 laptop that can walk out the door unnoticed is a higher verification priority than a ₹15,000 fixed workstation bolted to the floor.
Our business operates across multiple states and locations. How does PNPC coordinate a simultaneous verification?

For multi-location engagements, we plan a coordinated verification calendar across all sites, deploy teams (drawing on our Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad offices, and Dubai for UAE locations) to run physical counts within a tight, overlapping window, and consolidate the findings centrally so head office gets one unified exception report rather than fragmented, inconsistent site-level reports arriving at different times with different methodologies.

Practitioner noteRunning verification simultaneously (or within a tight window) across locations matters more than most businesses realise — assets are sometimes moved between sites specifically ahead of a known, staggered verification schedule, which a coordinated simultaneous approach naturally prevents.
What if the verification finds a much larger discrepancy than expected — could this indicate fraud?

A verification review is not designed as a fraud investigation, but a pattern of discrepancies — assets consistently missing from a specific location, a specific department, or under a specific approving authority — can be a legitimate red flag. Where the pattern and evidence point toward possible misappropriation rather than a simple administrative gap, we recommend and can help scope a separate, appropriately mandated forensic audit engagement rather than stretching the verification review beyond its evidentiary design.

Practitioner noteWe are careful not to make fraud allegations based on a verification review alone — the evidentiary standard and methodology for a forensic conclusion is different, and conflating the two can actually weaken a legitimate case if it later needs to stand up to scrutiny or litigation.
How long does a full fixed asset register build and verification take for a mid-size manufacturing company?

For a company with an unreliable or absent existing register, spread across two to four locations, a realistic timeline is 6–10 weeks from scoping consultation to final reconciled register — covering categorisation, tagging, physical verification, exception resolution, and depreciation recomputation. A lighter annual re-verification cycle on an already-tagged, previously-reconciled register can typically be completed in 2–4 weeks.

Practitioner noteThe single biggest timeline variable is not asset count — it is how many locations are involved and how spread out they are, since floor time and travel scheduling drive the fieldwork phase more than the sheer number of line items in the register.
Does PNPC only work with companies, or can proprietorships and partnerships also engage this service?

Any entity that owns fixed assets and needs a reliable asset record can engage this service — companies for whom it directly supports statutory audit and CARO reporting, but equally partnerships, LLPs, proprietorships, trusts, and NGOs that have bank facilities secured by assets, carry meaningful insurance exposure, or simply want an accurate operational record of what they own and where it is.

Practitioner noteNon-company entities do not face a CARO-style statutory trigger, but the underlying operational and financial risks of an unreliable asset register — bad insurance cover, undetected loss, misstated depreciation — apply just as much to them.
What deliverables do we actually receive at the end of the engagement?

A reconciled fixed asset register tying to the trial balance and financial statements, a documented verification methodology and exception log (missing assets, unrecorded assets, location mismatches), recomputed depreciation schedules where corrections were needed, a management letter summarising root causes and recommendations, and — where relevant — a cross-check of the insured asset schedule against the reconciled register.

Practitioner noteWe deliver the register in a working format the client's own accounts team can maintain going forward — not a one-off PDF that becomes stale the moment the engagement ends.
Can this engagement help with an insurance claim after a fire or flood?

A currently reconciled and evidenced fixed asset register is the strongest support a business can have when filing an insurance claim after a loss event — it establishes what existed, its location, and its book value at the time of loss, with far more credibility than a reconstructed list assembled under the pressure of a claim deadline. Where a loss has already occurred and no recent register exists, we can still help reconstruct the position from available records, though this is inherently harder and less complete than having current documentation in place beforehand.

Practitioner noteWe have supported clients reconstructing asset positions after a loss event with limited records — it is achievable but always produces a weaker claim position than a register that was already current and reconciled before the event.
How does capital work-in-progress (CWIP) get handled in a fixed asset review?

CWIP represents expenditure on assets under construction or installation that have not yet been put to use, and should not be depreciated until capitalisation. A common finding in fixed asset reviews is CWIP sitting on the books long after the underlying asset was actually commissioned and put to use — meaning depreciation should have started, and the classification as CWIP rather than a capitalised asset is understating the depreciation charge and misstating the balance sheet presentation.

Practitioner noteWe specifically test the actual commissioning date against the CWIP capitalisation date during verification — this is one of the more common and financially material findings in businesses undergoing expansion or plant upgrades.
What is the treatment for assets that are fully depreciated but still in use?

A fully depreciated asset that remains in physical use and continues to be needed for operations is retained in the register at its residual value (often a nominal ₹1 or the specified residual percentage under Schedule II) — it should not be written off simply because its book value has reduced to the minimum, as it still represents an asset the business owns and uses. It should, however, be flagged during verification as fully depreciated, so management has visibility into replacement planning.

Practitioner noteA surprising number of businesses assume 'fully depreciated' means 'can be quietly removed from the register' — it cannot, as long as the asset physically exists and continues to be used or held by the business.
Does PNPC handle both the accounting clean-up and the physical verification, or only one?

Both, as an integrated engagement. Physical verification without accounting reconciliation produces an exception list that never gets resolved in the books; accounting clean-up without physical verification produces a register that looks tidy on paper but is not actually confirmed against reality. PNPC's engagement covers the full cycle — from floor-level physical confirmation through to the journal entries, depreciation recomputation, and final register that ties to the financial statements.

Practitioner noteWe occasionally take on engagements where a client has already done the physical count themselves and needs only the accounting reconciliation, or vice versa — the scope is flexible to where the client's own capability already covers part of the work.
How does PNPC price a fixed asset management and verification engagement?

Pricing depends on the number of locations, the estimated asset count, the condition of existing records (a clean but unverified register costs materially less to work with than a register that needs to be rebuilt from scratch), and whether ongoing annual re-verification is bundled into the engagement or scoped separately. PNPC provides a written scope and fee estimate after the initial scoping consultation, once these variables are understood — not a blind quote before assessing the starting point.

Practitioner noteAsk any firm quoting this work for a fee before they have seen the state of your existing records to explain how they arrived at the number — a fixed asset clean-up genuinely priced without seeing the starting condition of the register is usually either padded or optimistic.
Is there a specific accounting standard threshold that determines whether a company must apply Ind AS to its fixed assets?

Applicability of Ind AS is determined at the company level under the Companies (Indian Accounting Standards) Rules, 2015 (as amended), based on criteria including listed status, net worth thresholds, and whether the company is part of a group where the parent or a group company is required to apply Ind AS — rather than being asset-specific. Once a company falls within Ind AS applicability, all its financial reporting, including Property, Plant and Equipment under Ind AS 16, follows that framework.

Practitioner noteInd AS applicability thresholds and phase-in criteria have been updated over successive Companies (Indian Accounting Standards) Amendment Rules — we confirm current applicability for each client specifically rather than relying on a rule of thumb, since getting this wrong affects the entire financial reporting framework, not just fixed assets.
What role does the Audit Committee or Board play in a fixed asset verification programme?

For companies with a constituted Audit Committee, PNPC typically presents the verification findings, exception log, and recommendations directly, giving the Committee visibility into the state of asset controls and the opportunity to direct remedial action — rather than the review being a purely finance-team-level exercise that only surfaces indirectly through the statutory auditor's report months later.

Practitioner notePresenting findings to the Audit Committee proactively, before the statutory audit fieldwork begins, consistently produces a smoother audit — the Committee has already seen and responded to the issues rather than being surprised by them in the auditor's report.
Can PNPC help design an ongoing addition and disposal capture process, not just a one-time clean-up?

Yes — and we recommend it as part of every engagement, because a fixed asset register that is clean today drifts out of reconciliation again within a year or two without a disciplined process for capturing every addition and disposal at the time it happens. We help design a simple protocol — who authorises a capitalisation or disposal, what documentation is required, and how it flows into the register — sized to the business's actual operating complexity, not a heavyweight corporate process that a smaller business will not sustain.

Practitioner noteThe businesses that maintain a clean register year after year, without needing a full clean-up engagement again, are almost always the ones that adopted a lightweight but consistently followed addition/disposal protocol — not the ones that simply did one very thorough one-time exercise.
Does PNPC's Dubai office support fixed asset verification for UAE entities as well?

Yes. For clients with operations, branches, or a UAE Free Zone or Mainland entity alongside their Indian business, PNPC's Dubai office coordinates fixed asset verification and register maintenance under UAE's own accounting and audit expectations, working alongside the India team where the same group has assets and reporting obligations on both sides.

Practitioner noteUAE Corporate Tax and VAT considerations on capital assets differ from the Indian framework — we scope the UAE-side engagement against UAE-specific requirements rather than simply mirroring the India approach, even where the underlying verification methodology is similar.
What is the single most common finding across PNPC's fixed asset verification engagements?

Assets that were physically scrapped, sold as scrap, or discarded by a site or plant team without the disposal ever being communicated to accounts or routed through a journal entry — so the register continues to carry an asset that has not existed for a year or more. The second most common finding is bulk-purchased items (furniture, computers, tools) recorded as a single lump-sum line with no individual tracking, making item-level verification impossible until they are broken out and tagged.

Practitioner noteBoth of these are process gaps, not accounting complexity — which is precisely why they are so persistent: they are invisible to the accounts team unless someone is specifically looking for them, and the site team responsible for the physical asset rarely realises accounting even needs to be told.
Why should we engage PNPC rather than have our own internal team run the verification?

An internal team verifying its own department's assets carries an inherent independence limitation — the same team that may have caused or overlooked a discrepancy is not always the best-positioned to surface it objectively, and internal teams are frequently stretched too thin on day-to-day operations to run a structured, evidence-based verification cycle with the discipline it requires. PNPC brings independent execution, a structured methodology developed across decades of CA practice, and — critically — direct coordination with your statutory auditor so the output is built to satisfy exactly what the audit will require.

Practitioner noteWe are not suggesting internal teams cannot run a competent verification — many can. The value we add is independence, methodology consistency across cycles, and removing the burden from a finance team that usually has this on a long list of priorities it never quite reaches.
Why PNPC Global

PNPC Global vs typical alternatives for fixed asset management & verification

ConsiderationPNPC GlobalGeneric Verification VendorInternal Team Only
Independence from the process being reviewedIndependent CA firm, no operational stake in the outcomeIndependent, but often lacks accounting/audit contextLimited — same team may have caused the gap
Ties findings to Companies Act, CARO 2020, Ind AS/ASYes — CA-led, aligned to statutory audit requirementsRarely — usually a pure asset-tagging serviceDepends entirely on in-house accounting expertise
Direct coordination with your statutory auditorYes — findings shared and discussed ahead of audit fieldworkNo — output handed to the client onlyInformal, if it happens at all
Depreciation recomputation & Schedule II correctionIncluded where requiredNot offered — physical tagging onlyPossible, but often deprioritised under workload
Multi-location, multi-jurisdiction coordinationChennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Dubai — one engagementTypically single-location or single-vendor-cityConstrained by available internal headcount
Ongoing annual cycle design, not one-time onlyYes — protocol designed so the register stays currentRarely — one-time project scope onlyDepends on internal discipline being sustained

What the PNPC package includes

  1. 01

    Scoping consultation to assess the current state of your fixed asset records and define the right depth of engagement

  2. 02

    Existing register and depreciation policy review against Schedule II, Ind AS 16, or AS 10 as applicable

  3. 03

    Asset categorisation and coding framework design, including breaking out bulk-purchased lump-sum items

  4. 04

    Physical tagging (barcode/QR) of individually significant or high-movement assets

  5. 05

    Location-by-location physical verification with a documented, evidence-based methodology

  6. 06

    Exception reporting and root-cause discussion with site and department owners

  7. 07

    Depreciation recomputation and correction of useful life, residual value, or capitalisation date errors

  8. 08

    Journal entry support for write-offs, write-backs, and reclassifications, correctly authorised and evidenced

  9. 09

    Reconciled fixed asset register that ties to the trial balance and financial statements

  10. 10

    Direct coordination with your statutory auditor ahead of year-end fieldwork to support a clean CARO 2020 remark

  11. 11

    Insurance schedule cross-check against the reconciled register, where an asset or fire/burglary policy is in place

  12. 12

    Design of an ongoing annual verification cycle and addition/disposal capture protocol

If your fixed asset register would not survive a direct question from your auditor, your bank, or a due diligence team tomorrow, that is exactly the gap a structured PNPC verification closes — talk to us before someone else asks the question for you.

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