Light treats fixed assets as a specialized form of accounting release.
Last updated May 3, 2026 · 5 min read
A fixed asset in Light is a posted document line (a journal entry, AP bill, or AR sales invoice line) that has a Fixed Asset release template applied to it. When the document posts:
This means the same engine that handles prepayments and deferred revenue also handles fixed assets — you just pick a different template type. See Configuring releases and Deferred entries for the underlying mechanics.
The fixed asset register lives at . To view only fixed assets, filter the page by Fixed asset type.
For each asset you can see:
Open a row to view the full depreciation schedule and book value chart. This view is the audit-ready supporting subledger for the fixed asset accounts on the balance sheet.
Before entering assets, configure at least one Fixed Asset template. Templates are reusable — most organizations create one per asset class (e.g., "5-Year Furniture", "3-Year Laptops", "10-Year Buildings").
Tip: Use descriptive template names that include duration and asset class. This makes the template list easy to scan when entering assets later.
Fixed assets can be entered from any of three document types, depending on how the asset was acquired:
| Acquisition | Document type |
|---|---|
| Purchased from a vendor | AP bill |
| Sold/transferred to a customer entity | AR sales invoice |
| Capitalized internally, transferred, or migrated from a legacy system | Manual journal entry |
In each case, the workflow is the same: enter the document line as you normally would, but apply a Fixed Asset release template on the line.
When posted, Light creates the AP liability for the full amount, capitalizes the cost to the additions account on the template, and begins posting depreciation entries on schedule.
Use a journal entry when there is no vendor invoice — for example, migrating opening fixed assets from a legacy system, capitalizing internally developed assets, or recording a transfer.
Used for inter-entity transfers or sales where the asset is being recognized on the receiving entity. The line behavior mirrors the bill flow — apply the Fixed Asset template via the Accrual template field on the invoice line.
To record office furniture purchased from a vendor for $12,000, depreciated straight-line over 5 years:
Bill line:
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Description | Office furniture |
| Amount | $12,000 |
| GL Account | 500500 — Office Furniture (depreciation expense) |
| Template | "5-Year Furniture" (Fixed Asset, 60 months, straight-line) |
Initial posting (when the bill is posted):
Monthly depreciation (repeated 60 times):
After 60 months, the asset has $0 remaining book value and the depreciation schedule is complete.
Light does not support direct import of a fixed asset register from a legacy system. To migrate:
This recreates the asset in Light's register at its current book value and resumes depreciation over the remaining useful life. Verify the register at (filtered by Fixed asset type) matches the legacy register before going live. See Go-live readiness for the broader cutover sequence.
Once a release has posted entries, you cannot delete it — Light's ledger is immutable. To handle changes:
For full transactional control over complex scenarios, see Manual journal entries.
Fixed Asset release templates honor the multi-currency rules of the underlying release framework. Cost is capitalized at the transaction-date FX rate, and depreciation entries post at the rate appropriate to your accounting policy (transaction, local, or group). FX revaluation of fixed asset balances follows the standard FX revaluation process — see FX revaluations.
The fixed asset section of the balance sheet summarizes capitalized cost and accumulated depreciation across all fixed asset accounts. For per-asset detail behind those balances, use the fixed asset register at filtered by Fixed asset type.
For audit support, the register is the supporting subledger that should reconcile to the fixed asset and accumulated depreciation accounts on the trial balance — see Audit-ready record keeping and Trial balance.
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