An “assets currently on hand” list is a snapshot of everything you own right now that has value, usually grouped so it’s easy to read and act on.

Below is a general structure you can use, plus the common items people include.

What “assets on hand” usually means

For most people or small businesses, this covers things you own that either:

  • Can be turned into cash quickly (current assets).
  • Are important longer‑term possessions (like property or equipment).

If you’re preparing this for an executor, accountant, or internal records, the goal is clarity: one place where someone can see what exists, where it is, and roughly what it’s worth.

Typical categories in an asset list

You can structure your list roughly like this:

  1. Cash and cash equivalents
    • Cash on hand (physical cash, petty cash).
    • Bank accounts (checking/current, savings).
    • Money market funds, short‑term deposits, treasury bills.
  2. Receivables and short‑term amounts due
    • Accounts receivable (customers who owe you money).
    • Notes receivable/short‑term loans you made that will be repaid within a year.
  1. Inventories and supplies
    • Merchandise inventory or stock held for sale.
    • Raw materials, work‑in‑progress, finished goods.
    • Unused office or operating supplies.
  1. Prepaid and other current assets
    • Prepaid rent or insurance.
    • Prepaid software subscriptions or service contracts.
    • Other amounts paid in advance that still have future benefit.
  1. Marketable securities and short‑term investments
    • Shares, short‑term bonds, funds you plan to hold less than a year.
    • Certificates of deposit or similar liquid investments.
  1. Longer‑term / fixed assets
    • Real estate (home, land, commercial property).
    • Vehicles, machinery, computers, furniture, equipment.
    • Other physical items with meaningful resale value.
  1. Intangible and digital assets
    • Domain names, websites, monetized social media accounts.
    • Important digital accounts (cloud storage, email, subscription services).
    • Intellectual property (patents, trademarks) where applicable.
  1. Other significant assets
    • Collectibles (art, jewelry, rare items).
    • Business interests (shares in private companies, partnerships).
    • Anything else of notable value that doesn’t fit above.

Example HTML table layout (for “on hand” assets)

You mentioned returning tables as HTML, so here’s a simple structure you can adapt and fill with your actual data:

html

<table border="1">
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Category</th>
      <th>Asset Description</th>
      <th>Location / Institution</th>
      <th>Identifier (Acct # / ID)</th>
      <th>Approx. Value</th>
      <th>Notes</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td>Cash & Bank</td>
      <td>Business checking account</td>
      <td>ABC Bank</td>
      <td>XXXX-1234</td>
      <td>10,000</td>
      <td>Operating cash</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>Inventory</td>
      <td>Finished goods – Product Line A</td>
      <td>Main warehouse</td>
      <td>SKU range A100–A299</td>
      <td>25,000</td>
      <td>At cost</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>Prepaid Expense</td>
      <td>Annual insurance premium (remaining)</td>
      <td>XYZ Insurance</td>
      <td>Policy #ABC-789</td>
      <td>3,000</td>
      <td>Coverage to Dec 31</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>Digital Asset</td>
      <td>Main domain name</td>
      <td>Registrar Co.</td>
      <td>example.com</td>
      <td>—</td>
      <td>Business website</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

How to build your actual “currently on hand” list

You can walk through these steps and fill that table:

  1. Gather statements and records
    • Bank and investment statements, inventory reports, subscription invoices, property records.
  1. List every asset under a category
    • One row per distinct item or grouping (e.g., “warehouse inventory – electronics”).
  1. Add locations and identifiers
    • Bank name, account number (partially masked), physical location, or URL/registrar for digital assets.
  1. Estimate current values
    • Use statement balances for financial items, recent cost or fair value for physical items.
  1. Review for completeness
    • Check you haven’t missed digital accounts, prepaid items, or smaller but important assets like tools or equipment.

If you tell me whether this list is for a business balance sheet, a personal estate/Will, or an internal operations report, I can tailor the categories and give you a tighter, ready‑to‑use HTML table template.