Cost Segregation
Studies Explained
Stop depreciating your building over 39 years. An engineering-based study can reclassify 20-40% of your property into faster depreciation schedules — unlocking massive Year 1 deductions that could save you tens of thousands.
What Is Cost Segregation?
What every real estate investor needs to know about this powerful depreciation strategy — and why 2025-2026 is the best time to act.
What Is a Cost Segregation Study?
A cost segregation study is an engineering-based tax strategy that identifies components of a building that can be depreciated over shorter time periods than the standard 27.5 years (residential) or 39 years (commercial). Instead of treating your entire building as a single asset that slowly depreciates over decades, a study breaks the property into its individual components — and reclassifies those that qualify into 5-year, 7-year, or 15-year asset classes.
The result? Dramatically accelerated depreciation deductions in the early years of ownership. A $2 million apartment complex that would normally generate approximately $55,000 per year in depreciation could generate $400,000 or more in Year 1 deductions with a properly performed cost segregation study combined with bonus depreciation. That's not a typo — it's the difference between 27.5 years of slow write-offs and front-loading deductions into the year you need them most.
Cost segregation is authorized under Section 168 of the Internal Revenue Code, which governs the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS). The IRS has published a detailed Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide outlining the methodology and standards for proper studies — a clear signal that the strategy is not only accepted but expected to be done correctly.
Why It Matters More Than Ever: The OBBBA Restored 100% Bonus Depreciation
Under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017, 100% bonus depreciation was available for assets placed in service through 2022. After that, it began phasing down: 80% in 2023, 60% in 2024, and was scheduled to drop to 40% in 2025, 20% in 2026, and 0% in 2027.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed on July 4, 2025, changed everything. The law permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation for qualifying property placed in service after January 20, 2025, with no scheduled phase-down. This means every dollar reclassified by a cost segregation study into a shorter-life asset class can potentially be written off entirely in Year 1.
For real estate investors, this is a generational opportunity. Cost segregation has always been valuable, but with permanent 100% bonus depreciation, the strategy is now as powerful as it has ever been — and there is no sunset date creating urgency to act before a deadline.
Key Facts at a Glance
- What It Is
- Engineering-based study that reclassifies building components for faster depreciation
- Tax Code
- Section 168 (MACRS) and Section 168(k) (Bonus Depreciation)
- Typical Benefit
- 20-40% of building cost reclassified to 5, 7, or 15-year property
- Year 1 Impact
- Can generate 5-10x the normal first-year depreciation deduction
- Study Cost
- $2,000 – $15,000 (desktop to full engineering; typical ROI of 5-10x)
- Property Minimum
- Generally $500K+ building basis (excluding land)
- Bonus Depreciation
- 100% — permanently restored by the OBBBA (July 2025)
- Look-Back Available
- Yes — catch up missed depreciation from prior years via Form 3115
Bottom Line
How a Cost Segregation Study Works
The step-by-step process from initial analysis to claiming your deductions.
The Core Concept
Without a cost segregation study, the IRS treats your entire building as a single asset. A commercial building depreciates over 39 years using straight-line depreciation; a residential rental depreciates over 27.5 years. But a building isn't just "one thing" — it's made up of hundreds of individual components, and many of those components have a useful life far shorter than 39 years.
Carpet doesn't last 39 years. Landscaping doesn't last 27.5 years. Appliances, cabinetry, decorative lighting, parking lots, fencing — none of these are structural components of a building. A cost segregation study identifies these components, quantifies their cost, and reclassifies them into the correct, shorter depreciation categories allowed under MACRS.
The Study Process
Timeline
Accepted Study Methodologies
The IRS recognizes several approaches to performing a cost segregation study. The quality and defensibility of the study depends heavily on which methodology is used:
Detailed Engineering Approach (Preferred)
Licensed engineers perform a physical inspection, review blueprints and specifications, and use construction cost estimating techniques to assign costs to each component. This is the gold standard that the IRS prefers and is most likely to withstand audit scrutiny.
Residual Estimation Approach
Costs are determined by subtracting the known cost of structural components from the total building cost. The remainder is allocated among shorter-life assets. Less precise than the engineering approach but acceptable when construction records are limited.
Sampling / Modeling Approach
Used for portfolios of similar properties (e.g., a chain of retail locations). A detailed study is performed on a representative property, then results are extrapolated to similar properties with adjustments. Cost-effective for large portfolios.
Avoid 'Rule of Thumb' Studies
How Much Does a Cost Segregation Study Cost?
What to expect to pay, what drives the price, and how to know if the math works for your property.
Cost segregation studies are not free, and the price range is wide: roughly $2,000 for a simple residential desktop report up to $15,000+ for a complex commercial engineering study. The main price drivers are property type (commercial costs more than residential), size and complexity, whether a physical site visit is included, and whether the provider charges a flat fee or a percentage of the tax benefit identified. For a $1M+ property, a full engineering study typically returns 5-10x its cost in first-year tax savings alone.
Because the study has a real cost, there is a break-even point. As a rule of thumb, a study is worth exploring when:
- Building basis exceeds ~$500,000 — below this, the study fee can outweigh the benefit (though smaller short-term rentals may still pencil with a desktop study)
- You plan to hold 3+ years — selling soon after the study means recapture tax can negate much of the benefit
- You are in a high tax bracket — the deduction is worth far more at 32-37% than at 22%
- You can actually use the losses — REPS or STR-loophole qualification makes the deductions usable against active income
The study fee itself is deductible as a business expense in the year incurred, which softens the net cost further. If you want a firm quote for your specific property, our cost segregation study service starts with a free feasibility analysis — we'll tell you the expected reclassification, the study price, and whether the math works before you commit a dollar.
ROI Rule of Thumb
Asset Classifications & Recovery Periods
Understanding which components are reclassified — and how much faster they depreciate.
The MACRS system assigns every depreciable asset to a specific "recovery period" — the number of years over which you deduct its cost. Cost segregation works by moving components out of the long-life building category and into shorter-life categories where they depreciate much faster.
Personal Property
Carpeting, appliances, cabinetry, window treatments, decorative lighting, furniture, certain electrical outlets
Fixtures & Equipment
Security systems, specialty plumbing, certain HVAC components, signage, telephone/data wiring
Land Improvements
Sidewalks, parking lots, curbing, fencing, landscaping, drainage, site utilities, retaining walls
Residential Rental
Structural components of residential rental property (walls, roof, foundation)
Commercial Property
Structural components of nonresidential real property (shell, structural walls, roof structure)
Why Recovery Period Matters
Consider a $100,000 component in a commercial building. Under the default 39-year classification, you'd deduct approximately $2,564 per year. But if that same component qualifies as 5-year personal property:
| Method | Year 1 Deduction | Year 5 Total | Full Recovery |
|---|---|---|---|
| 39-Year Straight Line | $2,564 | $12,820 | 39 years |
| 5-Year MACRS (no bonus) | $20,000 | $92,480 | 6 years |
| 5-Year + 100% Bonus | $100,000 | $100,000 | 1 year |
The same $100,000 component generates a $2,564 deduction under the default method — or a $100,000 deduction in Year 1 with cost segregation plus 100% bonus depreciation. That's a 39x acceleration. Multiply that across 20-40% of a building's cost basis, and the tax impact is transformational.
Qualified Improvement Property (QIP)
Cost Segregation + Bonus Depreciation
How the permanent restoration of 100% bonus depreciation supercharges cost segregation.
The Bonus Depreciation Timeline
Bonus depreciation (Section 168(k)) allows businesses to immediately deduct a percentage of the cost of eligible assets — rather than depreciating them over their full recovery period. (For the complete rules — qualifying assets, vehicles, Section 179 interaction, and recapture — see our full bonus depreciation guide.) Here's how the rules have evolved:
| Period | Bonus % | Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Sept 2017 – Dec 2022 | 100% | TCJA |
| Jan 2023 – Dec 2023 | 80% | TCJA phase-down |
| Jan 2024 – Jan 19, 2025 | 60% | TCJA phase-down |
| Jan 20, 2025 – Permanent | 100% | OBBBA (permanent) |
What Qualifies for Bonus Depreciation
Bonus depreciation applies to property with a MACRS recovery period of 20 years or less. In the context of cost segregation, this means:
- 5-year property — personal property, carpeting, appliances, certain fixtures
- 7-year property — office furniture, security systems, specialty items
- 15-year property — land improvements (parking lots, landscaping, fencing, sidewalks)
- Qualified Improvement Property (QIP) — interior improvements to nonresidential buildings (15-year)
- 27.5-year and 39-year property — structural building components do NOT qualify for bonus depreciation
Why This Combination Is So Powerful
Electing Out of Bonus Depreciation
You can elect out of bonus depreciation on a class-by-class basis. Why would you? If you expect to be in a significantly higher tax bracket in future years, spreading deductions may provide a larger overall tax benefit. You might also elect out if passive activity limitations would prevent you from using the deductions this year and you don't expect to have passive income in the near future. However, for most taxpayers, taking 100% bonus depreciation in the current year is the optimal strategy due to the time value of money.
Property Types & Typical Results
What to expect from a cost segregation study based on your property type.
The percentage of a building's cost that can be reclassified varies significantly by property type. Properties with more fixtures, specialized systems, and site improvements tend to yield higher reclassification percentages. Below are typical ranges — actual results depend on the specific property.
Apartment Complex
Reclassified
20-30%
Potential Y1 Bonus
$200K-$600K per $1M
Single-Family Rental
Reclassified
15-25%
Potential Y1 Bonus
$30K-$75K per $200K
Office Building
Reclassified
15-25%
Potential Y1 Bonus
$150K-$500K per $1M
Retail / Restaurant
Reclassified
25-40%
Potential Y1 Bonus
$250K-$800K per $1M
Industrial / Warehouse
Reclassified
15-25%
Potential Y1 Bonus
$150K-$500K per $1M
Medical / Dental Office
Reclassified
20-35%
Potential Y1 Bonus
$200K-$700K per $1M
Hotel / Hospitality
Reclassified
25-40%
Potential Y1 Bonus
$250K-$800K per $1M
Self-Storage Facility
Reclassified
15-20%
Potential Y1 Bonus
$150K-$400K per $1M
Restaurants & Retail: The Highest Reclassification Rates
Short-Term Rentals: A Special Opportunity
Short-term rentals (average stay of 7 days or less) receive special tax treatment. When combined with cost segregation, the depreciation generated can potentially offset active income like W-2 wages — even without Real Estate Professional Status. This is because short-term rentals are classified as a non-passive activity when the owner materially participates. A cost segregation study on a short-term rental property is one of the most powerful legal tax strategies available to W-2 earners. See our Short-Term Rental Tax Loophole Guide for details.
Cost Segregation Study Examples (Real Numbers)
Hypothetical scenarios showing how cost segregation impacts real-world tax situations.
New Apartment Complex Purchase
Sarah purchases a $2,000,000 apartment building (10 units). Land value: $400,000. Building basis: $1,600,000. Cost segregation study identifies 28% as shorter-life property.
$1,600,000 ÷ 27.5 years = $58,182/year depreciation
With Cost Segregation:
5-year property identified: $256,000 (16%)
15-year property identified: $192,000 (12%)
Remaining 27.5-year: $1,152,000 (72%)
Year 1 with 100% bonus: $256,000 + $192,000 = $448,000
Plus remaining straight-line: $1,152,000 ÷ 27.5 = $41,891
Total Year 1: $489,891
Tax impact: At a 37% federal bracket, the additional $431,709 in Year 1 deductions ($489,891 - $58,182) generates approximately $159,732 in additional tax savings in Year 1. The study cost of $8,000-$12,000 pays for itself roughly 15 times over.
Commercial Office Building
Dr. Patel purchases a $3,500,000 medical office building for her practice. Land: $700,000. Building basis: $2,800,000. Cost seg identifies 24% shorter-life property.
15-year property: $336,000 (12%) → 100% bonus = $336,000
Remaining 39-year: $2,128,000 (76%) → $2,128,000 ÷ 39 = $54,564
Plus QIP (interior improvements done at purchase): $17,231
Total Year 1: $743,795
Year 1 Deduction: $743,795 (vs. $71,795 without study)
The $672,000 in additional Year 1 deductions generates approximately $248,640 in federal tax savings at the 37% bracket.
Short-Term Rental (STR Loophole)
Mike, a W-2 employee earning $350,000, purchases a $750,000 short-term rental cabin. Land: $150,000. Building basis: $600,000. Cost seg identifies 30% shorter-life property. Mike materially participates in the rental.
15-year property: $60,000 (10%) → 100% bonus = $60,000
Remaining 27.5-year: $420,000 → $420,000 ÷ 27.5 = $15,273
Plus furnishings purchased separately: $6,545
Total Year 1: $201,818
Year 1 Deduction: $201,818 — offsets W-2 income
Because the average rental period is 7 days or less and Mike materially participates, the $201,818 loss is classified as non-passive and can offset his $350,000 W-2 income — reducing his taxable income to approximately $148,182.
Look-Back Study (Owned 5 Years)
Lisa purchased a $1,200,000 commercial retail building 5 years ago and never did a cost segregation study. Building basis: $960,000. Study identifies 26% shorter-life property. She files Form 3115.
Depreciation that should have been claimed with cost seg: $299,200
Section 481(a) adjustment: $299,200 - $123,077 = $176,123
Section 481(a) Catch-Up Deduction: $176,123 in single year
Lisa does not need to amend any prior returns. The entire catch-up amount is claimed in the current year as a Section 481(a) adjustment.
The Look-Back Study
Already own property? You can still benefit — and catch up on years of missed deductions.
What Is a Look-Back Study?
A look-back cost segregation study is performed on a property that was placed in service in a prior tax year — meaning you've already been depreciating it using the standard straight-line method. The study identifies the components that should have been classified in shorter-life categories from the beginning, calculates the cumulative difference in depreciation, and claims the entire difference as a deduction in the current tax year.
This is accomplished by filing Form 3115 (Application for Change in Accounting Method), which treats the reclassification as a change in depreciation method. The IRS grants automatic consent for this change — meaning you don't need to request permission, and you don't need to file amended returns for prior years. The cumulative adjustment (called a Section 481(a) adjustment) is taken entirely in the year of change.
How the Catch-Up Works
No Amended Returns Required
When a Look-Back Study Makes Sense
- You purchased or built a property in any prior year and never did a cost segregation study
- You have a high-income year and need additional deductions to offset income
- You recently achieved Real Estate Professional Status and can now use passive losses against active income
- You acquired a short-term rental and can now use losses against W-2 income
- The property still has significant remaining depreciable basis (i.e., you haven't fully depreciated it yet)
Important Limitation
Who Should Consider a Study
Cost segregation isn't for every property — but it's for more properties than most people think.
Ideal Candidates
- Property with $500K+ building basis — The study cost is typically justified when the building value (excluding land) exceeds $500,000
- New construction — Highest benefit because 100% bonus depreciation applies to all reclassified assets
- Recent purchases — Properties acquired in the last 1-3 years are prime look-back candidates
- Major renovations — Significant build-outs and improvements can be studied independently
- High-income owners — The higher your tax bracket, the greater the dollar value of accelerated deductions
- REPS or STR owners — Those who can use depreciation losses against active/W-2 income see the biggest impact
When It May Not Be Worth It
- Very low building basis — Properties under $200K building value may not generate enough benefit to justify study costs
- Planning to sell within 1-2 years — Depreciation recapture upon sale may offset much of the near-term benefit
- Low tax bracket with no passive income offset — If you're in a low bracket and can't use passive losses, the deductions may have limited value
- Raw land — Land is not depreciable and cost segregation only applies to building components and improvements
The Free Feasibility Test
Can I Do My Own Cost Segregation Study?
DIY estimates, desktop studies, and full engineering studies — what's defensible and when.
Technically, nothing in the tax code requires you to hire anyone — the IRS accepts any cost segregation methodology that produces an accurate, well-documented allocation. Practically, the question is whether your numbers would survive an audit. The IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide makes clear that quality is judged by the documentation and methodology behind the allocation, and a spreadsheet where you guessed "20% is probably personal property" has neither.
There is a middle ground. For smaller residential rentals (roughly $200K-$500K building basis), a desktop or DIY-software study — which uses construction cost databases, your purchase documents, and photos instead of an engineer's site visit — can be a defensible, cost-effective choice. The dollar amounts at stake are smaller, the component mix of a single-family rental is well understood, and several reputable providers stand behind their desktop reports with audit support. Just understand the trade-off: less documentation means less audit protection, so the cheaper the study, the more conservative your allocation should be.
For commercial property, short-term rentals with large basis, or any building over ~$500K, a full engineering-based study is the standard the IRS prefers — and the incremental fee is trivial next to the deductions at stake. Before deciding either way, run your property through our free cost segregation estimator to see the ballpark reclassification and Year 1 deduction. If the numbers are big, get the engineered study; if they're modest, a desktop study may be all you need.
Where DIY Goes Wrong
Depreciation Recapture
What happens when you sell — and why it's almost always still worth it.
Understanding Recapture Rules
Depreciation recapture is the most common concern about cost segregation — and the most commonly misunderstood. When you sell a property, the IRS requires you to "recapture" (pay back) some of the depreciation you've claimed. The recapture rate depends on the type of property:
Think of It as an Interest-Free Loan
| Asset Type | IRC Section | Recapture Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Property (5/7-year) | Section 1245 | Ordinary income rate (up to 37%) |
| Real Property (27.5/39-year) | Section 1250 | 25% (unrecaptured Sec. 1250 gain) |
| Land Improvements (15-year) | Section 1250 | 25% (treated as real property) |
Why Recapture Doesn't Erase the Benefit
The math strongly favors accelerated depreciation even with recapture. Here's why:
Time Value of Money
Taking a $200,000 deduction today and paying back $50,000-$74,000 in recapture taxes 5-10 years later is a significant net win. The tax savings you receive today can be invested, compounded, and put to work. A $200,000 deduction at a 37% bracket saves $74,000 today. Even if the full amount is recaptured at 37% upon sale in 7 years, the investment returns on $74,000 over 7 years (at even 7% annually) generate approximately $45,000 in additional wealth.
Rate Differential
You take deductions at your highest marginal rate (up to 37%) but recapture on real property is capped at 25%. For 15-year land improvements classified under Section 1250, you save at 37% and recapture at only 25% — a permanent 12% rate advantage on every dollar. Only Section 1245 personal property (5/7-year items) is recaptured at ordinary rates.
1031 Exchange Deferral
If you exchange rather than sell outright, depreciation recapture is deferred into the replacement property. You can continue deferring through successive 1031 exchanges — potentially eliminating recapture entirely if the property is held until death (stepped-up basis). See our guide on tax basis for details.
Recapture Is Not an Additional Tax
Combining With Other Strategies
Cost segregation is powerful alone — but exponentially more powerful when paired with the right complementary strategies.
Two Paths to Actually Use the Losses
Cost segregation creates the depreciation — but by default, rental losses are passive and can't touch your W-2 or business income. To unlock the losses against active income, you need one of two paths:
- Path 1: Real Estate Professional Status (REPS). If you or your spouse qualifies, all rental losses become non-passive and offset W-2 wages, business income, and capital gains without limitation. Best for households where one spouse manages properties full-time. See our breakdown of the cost seg + REPS combo.
- Path 2: The STR Loophole. If the average guest stay is 7 days or less and you materially participate, the property isn't treated as a rental activity at all — losses are non-passive with no REPS required. Best for self-managing Airbnb/VRBO operators. See the STR loophole guide.
Without either path, cost seg still works — but the losses are passive: they offset other passive income or carry forward until you sell. Decide which qualification path you can realistically meet before ordering the study; there's no point accelerating $150K of depreciation into a suspended-loss limbo.
Real Estate Professional Status (REPS)
Cost segregation generates large paper losses. REPS status allows those losses to be treated as non-passive, meaning they can offset W-2 wages, business income, and other active income. Without REPS (or the STR loophole), cost segregation losses are limited to offsetting passive income. For high-income real estate investors, REPS is the key that unlocks the full power of cost segregation. See our REPS Guide.
Short-Term Rental (STR) Loophole
Properties with an average rental period of 7 days or less are classified as non-passive when the owner materially participates — even without REPS status. This allows W-2 earners to use cost segregation losses against their wages. It's the most accessible path for high-income employees to generate significant tax deductions from real estate. See our STR Loophole Guide.
1031 Exchange + Cost Segregation
When you 1031 exchange into a replacement property, perform a new cost segregation study on the replacement property. The accelerated depreciation resets on the new property's components while the deferred gain continues to carry forward. You can also do a look-back study on the relinquished property before the exchange to maximize deductions in the final year of ownership.
QBI Deduction (Section 199A)
Cost segregation creates depreciation deductions that reduce your Qualified Business Income (QBI) from rental activities. However, the resulting lower QBI means a lower QBI deduction. The interaction is complex: the income tax savings from accelerated depreciation almost always outweigh the reduced QBI deduction, but the analysis should be modeled before proceeding. See our QBI Deduction Guide.
Entity Structure Optimization
Holding real estate in an LLC taxed as a partnership or S corporation creates flexibility for allocating depreciation deductions among owners. In a partnership, special allocations can direct depreciation to the partner who benefits most. The entity structure should be established before or simultaneously with the cost segregation study to maximize the tax benefit.
Partial Asset Disposition
When you renovate or replace building components (new roof, HVAC system, etc.), you can claim a loss deduction for the remaining undepreciated value of the old component being replaced. A cost segregation study identifies the original cost of each component, making it easy to calculate and claim this often-overlooked deduction under Treasury Regulation 1.168(i)-8.
Frequently Asked Questions
Glossary of Key Terms
Resources & Next Steps
IRS Guidance & Official Resources
For authoritative guidance, refer to the IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide, Form 3115 Instructions, and IRS Publication 946: How to Depreciate Property.
Related Guides on Taxstra
Bonus Depreciation Guide
How Section 168(k) works and the OBBBA changes.
Real Estate Professional Status
Qualify for REPS to unlock passive loss deductions.
Short-Term Rental Loophole
Use STR losses to offset W-2 income without REPS.
QBI Deduction (Section 199A)
How cost segregation interacts with the QBI deduction.
When to Consult a Professional
Cost segregation involves engineering analysis, complex tax rules, and interactions with passive activity limitations, QBI, and entity structure. While this guide provides a thorough overview, every property is different. A $5,000-$15,000 investment in a properly performed study that generates $100,000-$500,000 in accelerated deductions is one of the highest-ROI tax planning decisions you can make. Consider exploring our cost segregation study service or booking a free strategy call to discuss your specific situation.
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