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Businesses often suffer losses due to unforeseen events such as fire, flood, theft, or accidents. If such assets are insured, part or full compensation is received later from the insurance company.

But how do we account for the loss of asset and insurance claim in the books? What if the insurance claim is still pending? How should this be disclosed in tax filings and financial statements?

This article addresses:

Accounting treatment of asset loss

Recognition of insurance claim

Tax treatment under Income Tax Act

Relevant disclosures under accounting standards

1. Accounting Treatment as per Accounting Standards

Applicable Standards:

AS 10 (Property, Plant & Equipment)

AS 4 (Contingencies and Events Occurring After Balance Sheet Date)

AS 29 (Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets

2. Step-by-Step Accounting Entries

Scenario:

A machine costing ₹10,00,000 (WDV₹6,00,000) was destroyed in a fire. The asset was insured, and the company expects ₹7,00,000 as insurance claim.

a. Write-off of Asset Lost

Loss due to Fire A/c Dr. 6,00,000
To Asset A/c  6,00,000

(Being  WDV written off as loss)

b. Recording Insurance Claim Receivable.

Insurance Claim Receivable A/c Dr. 7,00,000
To Gain on Insurance Claim A/c 1,00,000
To Loss due to Fire A/c  6,00,000

c. On Receipt of Claim.

Bank A/c   Dr. 7,00,000
To Insurance Claim Receivable A/c  7,00,000

3. Tax Treatment under Income Tax Act

Loss of Asset (WDV): Treated as shortfall in block, can be adjusted against depreciation block or treated as terminal loss.

Insurance Claim Received:

Treated as capital receipt, taxable if it exceeds WDV of block.

Under Section 43(1), the amount received reduces the cost of block of asset.

If the block ceases to exist (i.e., only one asset), capital gain/loss arises.

4. Illustrative Case:

Particulars Amount

Cost of Asset ₹10,00,000

WDV ₹6,00,000

Insurance Claim Received ₹7,00,000

Profit on Claim ₹1,00,000 (credited to P&L)

Tax Treatment ₹1,00,000 taxable under “Income from Business” or reduces WDV block depending on asset structure

5. Disclosure in Financial Statements:

Under AS 4, material post-balance sheet events (e.g., asset destruction or claim settlement) must be disclosed if it affects understanding of financials.

1.Under Schedule III of Companies Act, disclose:

2.Nature and amount of loss

3.Details of insurance claim (if significant)

4.Status of settlement, if pending

6. Practical Cautions

1.Don’t recognize insurance claim before certainty (as per prudence).

2.Maintain backup documentation: FIR, insurance policy, loss assessment.

3.In tax audit, mention if claim is pending but expected in future years.

4.Capital receipts vs revenue treatment depends on nature (asset vs stock).

Conclusion:

Accounting for loss of insured assets needs both prudence and clarity. Proper documentation, classification, and timing of recognition are key for correct treatment in financial and tax records.

Treatment under indian accounting standards :

Under Ind AS, the accounting of an asset destroyed or damaged (e.g., by fire, flood, accident) and subsequent insurance recovery must comply with stricter recognition and disclosure principles compared to AS.

1.How to derecognize the asset under Ind AS 16?

2.When to recognize insurance claims under Ind AS 37?

3.How to deal with pending settlements as contingent assets?

Tax implications and financial statement disclosure.

1. Relevant Ind AS Standards:

Ind AS 16 – Property, Plant and Equipment Derecognition of damaged asset

Ind AS 37 – Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets Recognition of insurance claim

Ind AS 10 – Events After the Reporting Period Disclosure if loss/claim happens post year-end.

2. Practical Scenario:

A factory machine with:

Gross Carrying Amount Rs. 12,00,000
Accumulated Depreciation Rs.5,00,000
Carrying Value (CV) Rs.7,00,000
Machine destroyed by fire

Insurance claim filled

 Rs.8,00,000

Claim is still being assessed by insurance company at balance sheet date

3. Step-by-Step Accounting Entries (Under Ind AS)

a. Derecognition of the Asset (Ind AS 16.67)

Once it is certain the asset is unusable:

Loss Due to Fire A/c   Dr. ₹7,00,000
To PPE – Machine A/c ₹7,00,000

> Derecognition is based on Ind AS 16 para 67–72.

b. Recognition of Insurance Claim (Ind AS 37)

If Virtually Certain of Receipt (per Ind AS 37.33):

Insurance Receivable A/c Dr. ₹8,00,000
To Income / Other Operating Income ₹8,00,000

(Shown as other income in P&L; not netted off against asset)

If Not Virtually Certain:

Pass no entry.

Claim is disclosed as a contingent asset in the notes (per Ind AS 37.33–35).

Revenue recognition is stricter under Ind AS — even if probable, don’t recognize until virtually certain.

c. On Receipt of Insurance Claim

Bank A/c Dr. ₹8,00,000
To Insurance Receivable A/c ₹8,00,000

 4. Disclosure Requirements

As per Ind AS 37 and Ind AS 10:

1.Nature of loss (asset destroyed)

2.Amount and accounting treatment

3.Status of insurance claim:

4.Recognized: as receivable under “Other Financial Assets”

5.Not recognized: disclosed as contingent asset

6.Ind AS 10 (Events after Reporting Period):

If the event (e.g., fire) occurred after balance sheet date but before approval of FS, disclose as non-adjusting event.

Financial Statement Presentation.

Loss on asset: Show under “Other Expenses”

Insurance claim income: “Other Income” (not netted)

Contingent asset: Shown only in Notes to Accounts, not on face of FS

Disclose:

Carrying amount of asset lost

Income recognized or not

Nature of event

6. Tax Treatment (Same as AS)

Though accounting follows Ind AS, tax computation under Income Tax Act remains the same:

Loss of asset = possible terminal depreciation

Insurance claim = capital receipt, may reduce WDV of block or result in capital gain

No deferral of claim income for tax purposes even if it’s pending in books.

7. Common Practical Issues

1. If a Claim pending, auditor insists on not recognizing it is advisable to Disclose as contingent asset only.

2. Claim is higher than book value then  Excess goes to P&L as income

3.If the Claim is partially accepted  later then Adjust difference in the year of receipt.

4.If Fixed asset register not updated then  Update with write-off and cross-reference to claim file

8. Summary

Particular Ind AS Treatment:

1.Asset destroyed Derecognize asset at carrying value (Ind AS 16)

2 Insurance claim Recognize only when virtually certain (Ind AS 37)

3.Partial claims Recognize only assured portion

4.Disclosures Notes in FS under Ind AS 10 and 37

Accounting under Ind AS is principle-based, demanding more judgment and documentation. When dealing with insurance-covered losses, ensure:

1.Timely recognition and derecognition

2.Conservative revenue treatment (not before certainty)

3.Clear audit trail and disclosures

Such transparent accounting not only satisfies auditors but also helps businesses stay compliant and tax-efficient.

Author Bio

Hi, This Bharath CM you are reach me @chinnamoogollabharath@gmail.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/bharath-chinnamoogolla-ab0b0b31b View Full Profile

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