Practical asset categorization for bookkeepers: current vs fixed vs intangibles, capitalization thresholds, 2026 §179 and bonus depreciation under OBBBA, and QBO setup.
6 articles
Assets feel like the easy part of the balance sheet. Cash is cash, AR is what customers owe, fixed assets are the stuff. Then a real client shows up with a $4,500 industrial printer purchase, a $50,000 security deposit on a new lease, $30,000 in prepaid insurance, and an SBA loan that requires monthly amortization tracking. The "easy part" needs structure.
This guide covers asset account categorization the way bookkeepers actually encounter the questions inside your chart of accounts: current versus fixed, where deposits go, the capitalization threshold decision, the 2026 §179 and bonus depreciation rules under OBBBA, and the QBO account-numbering setup that keeps the chart readable as the business grows.
Current Assets (Convertible to Cash Within 12 Months)
Current assets are everything the business expects to turn into cash within a year. Order on the balance sheet runs from most liquid (cash) to least (prepaid expenses).
Cash and bank accounts
Each bank account gets its own QBO account: operating checking, savings, payroll account if the business uses one, money market. Use account numbers in the 1000-1099 range so the chart of accounts sorts cash to the top. If the business uses Mercury, BlueVine, Relay, or another fintech bank, set up the account the same way as a traditional bank. QBO doesn't care about the underlying institution.
Cash equivalents (money market funds, T-bills under 90 days) typically combine with cash unless the dollar amount is material. For a small business with $400K in cash, breaking out the $50K in T-bills as a separate "Short-Term Investments" account is fine and gives the CEO visibility.
Accounts receivable
Customer invoices outstanding is what customers owe. QBO's default "Accounts Receivable" account is sufficient for most businesses. Sub-accounts only make sense if you want to break out AR by entity (US AR vs Canada AR, intercompany AR) or by terms (Net 30 AR vs longer-dated AR for milestone projects).
Tracking practice: run an A/R aging report monthly. Anything over 60 days needs follow-up. Anything over 120 days is a write-off candidate, and the write-off hits "Bad Debt Expense" with a credit to AR, not a reduction of revenue.
Inventory
Inventory shows up on product businesses (e-commerce, retail, distribution). Two methods: perpetual (every purchase and sale updates inventory) or periodic (count at month-end and adjust). QBO Plus and Advanced support perpetual inventory with the inventory items feature.
The judgment call: inventory versus supplies. A bakery's flour is inventory (sold to customer). A bakery's cleaning supplies are not (consumed in operations, expense to "Office Supplies" or "Operating Supplies"). The materiality test: if the business has under $5,000 of "supplies" at year-end, expense them as bought. If material, capitalize as inventory.
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What Category Is Vehicle & Mileage Expenses? (Chart of Accounts Guide)
Vehicle expenses split into two methods: standard mileage (a single per-mile rate that covers gas, depreciation, and maintenance) or actual expense (every cost tracked separately). The choice in year one usually locks in the rest.
Undeposited Funds: What It Is & Why Your Books Are Off
Undeposited Funds is the QBO holding account where customer payments sit between receipt and bank deposit. It exists so a single bank statement deposit can match multiple customer payments. Here's how to use it correctly and clear stuck balances.
What Category Is Software & Subscriptions? (Chart of Accounts Guide)
SaaS goes in Software Subscriptions. Memberships and trade publications go in Dues & Subscriptions. Small one-off tools under $50/year go in Office Expenses. Three accounts, one decision tree, no more guessing where Slack goes.
What Category Is Rent & Utilities? (Chart of Accounts Guide)
Rent and utilities sit in two separate Operating Expense accounts. Home office allocation usually doesn't get its own COA line, security deposits hit Other Assets (not expense), and CAM charges roll into Rent, not Utilities.
What Category Is Business Insurance? (Chart of Accounts Guide)
Business insurance goes to Insurance Expense, usually one parent account with optional sub-accounts by policy type. Annual premiums paid upfront sit in Prepaid Insurance and amortize monthly. S-corp owner health insurance follows special W-2 rules.
Prepaid expenses are payments made now for future periods: annual insurance premiums, prepaid rent, prepaid SaaS subscriptions, prepaid professional service retainers. Goes to "Prepaid Expenses" with sub-accounts if there are multiple types.
Workflow: when the bill is paid, the entry is debit "Prepaid Insurance" (asset), credit cash. Each month, a journal entry moves 1/12 of the prepaid balance to "Insurance Expense." For a $12,000 annual premium paid in January, January expense is $1,000, not $12,000.
For cash-basis tax filers, the entire prepaid amount is deductible when paid (subject to the 12-month rule for prepaid expenses under Reg. §1.263(a)-4(f)). For accrual books, the spread is more accurate.
Fixed Assets (Property, Plant, Equipment)
Fixed assets, also called PP&E (Property, Plant, and Equipment), are the long-term operating assets. The defining characteristic: useful life over 12 months and value above the capitalization threshold.
Vehicles
Company vehicles get capitalized to "Vehicles" with sub-accounts by vehicle if the business has more than one (Vehicles - 2024 Ford F-150 VIN ending 1234, Vehicles - 2023 Toyota Tacoma VIN ending 5678). Personal vehicle use for business is handled differently. The business doesn't own the vehicle, so the deduction is mileage reimbursement, not a fixed asset entry.
For S-corp owners using their personal vehicle for business: the business reimburses the owner via accountable plan at the IRS standard mileage rate (70¢/mile for TY2025; TY2026 rate via forthcoming IRS notice). The reimbursement posts to "Vehicle Reimbursement" (expense), not as an asset.
Office equipment and furniture
Furniture, desks, chairs, conference tables, kitchen equipment in the office. Goes to "Office Furniture and Equipment" or split into "Furniture" and "Equipment" if the business has meaningful amounts of both. Capitalization threshold typically $2,500-$5,000 per item.
Computer hardware
Computers, monitors, servers, network equipment. Goes to "Computer Equipment" or "Computer Hardware." A $1,200 laptop expenses under most de minimis safe harbor elections ($2,500 threshold). A $4,500 server capitalizes.
For high-volume tech purchases (a 50-person company refreshing laptops every three years), consider a sub-account structure: Computer Equipment - Laptops, Computer Equipment - Monitors, Computer Equipment - Servers. Helps with depreciation tracking and asset disposal accounting.
Leasehold improvements
Improvements to leased space: build-out costs, custom flooring, lighting upgrades, partition walls. Goes to "Leasehold Improvements." Useful life is the lesser of the asset's actual life or the remaining lease term. For tax purposes, leasehold improvements are 15-year property eligible for §179 and bonus depreciation under OBBBA.
Depreciation and Accumulated Depreciation
The bookkeeper's job for depreciation: set up the asset accounts correctly. The tax preparer calculates depreciation at year-end. But the chart of accounts has to support both views.
Straight-line vs MACRS
Book depreciation typically uses straight-line: cost minus salvage value, divided by useful life. Tax depreciation uses MACRS (Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System) with prescribed lives and accelerated methods.
Most small businesses don't bother with separate book and tax depreciation; they use the tax numbers for both. That's fine for cash-basis tax filers and small accrual businesses. For larger or audit-ready books, the difference between book and tax depreciation creates a deferred tax timing item.
The QBO setup: each fixed asset account gets a paired "Accumulated Depreciation" sub-account (or contra-asset account). Example structure:
Under OBBBA, §179 expensing rose to $2,560,000 for TY2026 with phase-out beginning at $4,090,000 of qualifying property placed in service. The SUV cap is $32,000.
§179 lets the business expense (rather than depreciate) qualifying tangible property in the year placed in service. It applies to most business equipment, vehicles (subject to caps), and qualified improvement property. The election is made annually on the tax return.
Bookkeeper role: capitalize the asset on the books at full cost, set up depreciation schedules in a tracking tool (or in QBO via fixed asset module). The tax preparer makes the §179 election at year-end and the books may need a journal entry to align book depreciation with tax depreciation if the client wants matched reporting.
Bonus depreciation under OBBBA
100% bonus depreciation is permanent under OBBBA §10301 for property placed in service after 1/19/2025. This is a major change. Bonus had been phasing down (60% in 2024, 40% in 2025 pre-OBBBA) and OBBBA reset it to 100% permanently.
Bonus depreciation differs from §179 in scope: bonus applies to most new and used tangible property with a recovery period of 20 years or less. There's no dollar cap on bonus (§179 has the $2.56M cap and phase-out). Most small businesses with significant equipment purchases will use bonus for the bulk of the deduction and §179 for specific items where it's preferable.
R&D expensing was also restored: 100% deductible for TY2025-TY2029 under OBBBA §10301. R&D costs that were being capitalized and amortized over 5 years (post-TCJA) can again expense currently within this window.
Practical bookkeeper takeaway: don't make depreciation election decisions in QBO. Capture asset purchases at full cost in the right fixed asset account, document the in-service date and asset description, and let the tax preparer handle bonus, §179, and MACRS at year-end.
Intangible Assets and Other Assets
Software (capitalized vs expensed)
Most SaaS subscriptions expense to "Software and Subscriptions"; they're operating expenses, not capitalized assets. The exception: enterprise software with a license fee structure, multi-year prepaid licenses, or internally-developed software meeting the capitalization criteria.
For a small business, this almost never matters. Practical rule: if the SaaS subscription bills monthly or annually and you can cancel anytime, expense it. If the business signed a $50,000 three-year ERP license, that's a capitalized intangible amortized over the license term.
Goodwill
Goodwill arises only from a business acquisition. It's the excess of purchase price over the fair value of identifiable assets. Goes to "Goodwill" as an intangible asset. Goodwill isn't amortized for book purposes (it's tested for impairment annually); for tax purposes, it amortizes over 15 years under §197.
If the business hasn't acquired another business, there's no goodwill. Bookkeepers occasionally see "goodwill" appearing on a small business's books with no acquisition trail. That's almost always an error.
Security deposits
Security deposits (office lease deposits, utility deposits) go to "Other Assets" or "Security Deposits," NOT to expense. The deposit is refundable; it's the business's money sitting with the landlord/utility. Expensing it overstates expenses and understates assets.
When the deposit is returned, it reverses out of "Security Deposits" to cash. If the deposit is forfeited (lease breach), the asset gets written off to expense at that point.
Loans receivable
If the business has lent money to another party (owner loan, employee advance, intercompany loan), the receivable goes to "Loans Receivable" or "Notes Receivable." Sub-accounts by borrower if there are multiple. Owner loans (loans from the business to a shareholder) are particularly important to track because the IRS has rules on imputed interest if the loan rate is below applicable federal rates.
QuickBooks Asset Account Setup
QBO default asset accounts
QBO ships with Cash, Accounts Receivable, and a basic Inventory Asset account if inventory is enabled. Everything else needs to be added. Recommended baseline:
Numbering convention: 1000-series for assets keeps the chart sorted top-down.
Adding fixed asset accounts with depreciation sub-accounts
For each new fixed asset class, create a paired structure: cost account + accumulated depreciation contra-account. The accumulated depreciation account has a credit balance (it reduces the asset). Most QBO setups put both at the same parent level so the balance sheet displays them together.
Net book value displayed = $30,000 minus accumulated depreciation
Mapping bank feeds to cash accounts
Bank feed setup is where most QBO setups break. Each bank account should connect via direct feed. The mapping rule: bank feed deposits and withdrawals post to the bank account first, then get categorized to revenue/expense as transactions are reviewed.
Common error: the bank feed maps to a generic "Cash" account that doesn't match the actual bank statement. Result: reconciliation is a nightmare because the bank balance and book balance don't match. Fix: each bank feed maps to its specific QBO bank account (1001 Operating Checking, 1002 Savings, etc.). Reconcile each one separately.
For loan setup details (when a loan deposit hits the bank), see AP and loans. For equity setup (owner contributions), see owner's equity.
Related Glossary
For definitions that sit behind this asset setup, use the balance sheet terms glossary. It groups AP, AR, bank reconciliation, fixed assets, liabilities, and equity vocabulary in one place so the monthly close review stays readable.
Growthy is bookkeeping software, not a CPA firm. This content is educational, not professional advice. Full disclaimer.
Accounts Receivable (AR): What It Is & How It Works
Accounts receivable is the money customers owe you for invoices already sent but not yet collected. It's a current asset on the balance sheet, not revenue. Here's how AR moves through the QBO Invoice/Customer workflow.