Accelerated Depreciation Explained for Business Owners in Tamil Nadu
If you run a profitable business—whether it’s a Matriculation School in Neyveli, a hotel in Pondicherry, or a cashew processing unit in Panruti—two forces constantly drain your cash flow:
- Electricity costs, rising at roughly 5% every year
- Corporate income tax, consuming 25%–30% of your profits
In 2026, commercial solar stands out as a rare financial instrument that tackles both problems at once. It is one of the few assets that pays returns in two currencies:
Energy savings and tax savings
This guide explains how Section 32 of the Income Tax Act makes solar power one of the most tax-efficient investments for businesses in Tamil Nadu.
1. What Is Accelerated Depreciation (AD)?
In accounting, depreciation represents the reduction in value of an asset due to usage and time. This depreciation is treated as an expense, reducing your taxable profit.
- Standard machinery:
Depreciates at 15% per year (Written Down Value method) - Solar power plants:
Classified as “Renewable Energy Devices”, eligible for 40% accelerated depreciation per year
Why This Matters
Accelerated depreciation allows you to book a large expense in the initial years, significantly lowering your taxable income, even while the asset continues to generate cash.
In simple terms:
You save tax upfront, while still earning from the asset.
2. ROI Breakdown: Where Energy Efficiency Meets Tax Planning
Let’s look at a realistic commercial example based on a Cuddalore manufacturing unit.
Project Assumptions
- System Size: 20kW on-grid solar plant
- Total Investment: ₹10,00,000
- Corporate Tax Rate: 30% (including surcharge & cess)
- Electricity Tariff: ₹10 per unit
Accelerated Depreciation Tax Shield (Section 32)
| Year | Opening WDV | Depreciation @40% | Expense Booked | Tax Saved (30%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | ₹10,00,000 | ₹4,00,000 | ₹4,00,000 | ₹1,20,000 |
| Year 2 | ₹6,00,000 | ₹2,40,000 | ₹2,40,000 | ₹72,000 |
| Year 3 | ₹3,60,000 | ₹1,44,000 | ₹1,44,000 | ₹43,200 |
| Year 4 | ₹2,16,000 | ₹86,400 | ₹86,400 | ₹25,920 |
Total Tax Saved (4 years): ~₹2.6 Lakhs
👉 26% of the project cost is recovered purely through tax savings.
Energy Savings Calculation
- Annual Generation: ~30,000 units (Cuddalore conditions)
- Annual Savings:
30,000 × ₹10 = ₹3.0 Lakhs per year
Combined ROI & Payback
- Year 1 Inflow: ₹3.0L (energy) + ₹1.2L (tax) = ₹4.2L
- Year 2 Inflow: ₹3.0L + ₹0.72L = ₹3.72L
- Year 3 Inflow: ₹3.0L + ₹0.43L = ₹3.43L
Cumulative inflow by Year 3: ₹11.35 Lakhs
Initial investment: ₹10 Lakhs
✅ Payback period: Under 3 years
After that, electricity is effectively free for the next 22+ years.
3. GST Input Tax Credit (ITC)
Income tax isn’t the only benefit.
- Solar components attract 12%–18% GST
- GST-registered businesses can claim Input Tax Credit against output GST liability
Result
The effective project cost reduces further by 12%–18%, improving overall ROI.
(Coordination with your CA is essential to structure this correctly.)
4. Case Study: Matriculation School in Neyveli
Client Profile
- 800 students
- High daytime electricity usage (fans, smart boards, computers, staff ACs)
Problem
- Monthly electricity bill: ₹45,000
Solution
- 25kW on-grid solar system
Outcome
- Electricity bill: Reduced to ₹2,000 (fixed charges only)
- Tax planning: 40% depreciation adjusted against profits from allied trust activities
- Educational value: Solar plant used as a live teaching tool for physics and environmental studies
Solar became both a financial asset and an educational resource.
5. Solar vs Fixed Deposit: A Fair Comparison
| Feature | Bank Fixed Deposit | Solar Power Plant |
|---|---|---|
| Average ROI | ~7% p.a. | 30%–40% p.a. |
| Tax Treatment | Interest fully taxable | Depreciation deductible |
| Inflation Impact | Reduces real returns | Hedge against power inflation |
| Risk | Low | Low (mature technology) |
| Asset Life | Cash | 25+ years |
Conclusion:
Solar outperforms FDs by nearly 4× over the long term.
6. Compliance Checklist for Your Chartered Accountant
Maintain a proper audit trail to avoid disallowance:
- Tax Invoice:
Must include GSTIN, correct description (“Solar Power Generating System”) - Commissioning Certificate / Work Completion Report
- Connectivity Proof:
CEIG safety certificate or TNEB net-meter installation report - Photographs:
Dated, geo-tagged images of the installed system
The September 30 Rule (Very Important)
- Asset commissioned before Sept 30 → 100% depreciation (40%)
- Asset commissioned after Sept 30 → 50% depreciation (20%) for that year
💡 Pro tip: March installations are terrible for tax planning.
7. Final Takeaway: Stop Paying Bills. Start Building Assets.
If your business pays more than ₹20,000 per month in electricity charges, delay is costing you money every single day.
Solar converts:
- Revenue expenditure (electricity bills)
into - Capital expenditure (a long-term income-generating asset)
Don’t pay TNEB.
Don’t overpay tax.
Pay yourself.
