Capital Construction-in-Progress (CIP) accounting is a temporary balance sheet holding category used to accumulate and track all costs of a capital asset while it is being built, assembled, or developed. Under accounting standards like GAAP and IFRS, companies cannot expense these long-term investments immediately. Instead, they capitalize the costs into a non-depreciable CIP account until the asset is ready for its intended use. The Core Mechanics of CIP Accounting
Account Classification: Placed under Property, Plant, and Equipment (PP&E) as a non-current asset.
No Depreciation: Assets in CIP do not depreciate because they are not yet delivering economic value.
The Threshold: Costs accumulate until the project achieves “substantial completion”.
The Handoff: Upon completion, the balance clears out of CIP and transfers into a permanent, depreciable fixed asset category (e.g., Buildings, Machinery). What Costs Can Be Capitalized?
Efficient tracking requires drawing a strict line between capitalized project costs and regular operating expenses. Only costs directly attributable to bringing the asset to operational status qualify:
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