for small business owners
Real MACRS depreciation, not just an insurance number.
A home office, a studio, a small storefront — if you own real equipment for a business, it needs a different kind of number than a household item does. This is a real, existing mode, not a separate product bolted on.
One toggle, two real depreciation schedules
Mark an inventory as business assets in one toggle, and every item gets a real MACRS (Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System) schedule — estimated from IRS Publication 946's half-year-convention tables — calculated alongside, not instead of, its separate insurance replacement value.
Real 5- and 7-year recovery classes
Computers and similar equipment fall on the 5-year MACRS table, general business equipment on the 7-year table — each item shows this year's deduction and its current book value, not just one lump total.
The same evidence pipeline underneath
Business-asset items still go through the full scan pipeline — photo evidence, coverage-gap flags, cryptographically timestamped proof — so the same walkthrough backs both your books and an actual insurance claim if equipment is ever lost or damaged.
Worth being direct about scope: this calculates the schedules for you, but it isn't tax-filing software and isn't a substitute for your accountant. Treat the numbers as a real, correctly-calculated starting point — confirm the final figures with whoever files your return.