Key Takeaway
Cost segregation can accelerate depreciation and save real estate investors thousands in taxes. Learn how it works, when it makes sense, and what it costs.
You bought a rental property in Frisco for $500,000. Without any special planning, you'll depreciate the building over 27.5 years—that's about $15,000 per year in depreciation deductions.
But what if you could take $150,000 in depreciation deductions in year one?
That's the power of cost segregation. It's an engineering study that reclassifies parts of your property into shorter depreciation categories—meaning bigger deductions, faster. Combined with bonus depreciation, you can front-load massive write-offs that dramatically cut your tax bill right now.
What Is Cost Segregation?
Cost segregation is an engineering-based analysis that identifies components of your building that can be depreciated faster than the standard 27.5 years (residential) or 39 years (commercial).
Instead of treating your entire building as one asset, a cost segregation study breaks it down into components:
| Component Type | Depreciation Period | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Land improvements | 15 years | Parking lots, landscaping, sidewalks, fencing |
| Personal property | 5-7 years | Appliances, carpeting, cabinets, fixtures |
| Building | 27.5/39 years | Walls, roof, foundation |
By reclassifying 20-40% of your property into shorter-lived categories, you accelerate your deductions significantly.
How the Numbers Work
Let's look at a real example.
Property: $600,000 commercial building in Richardson (land: $100,000, building: $500,000)
Without Cost Segregation
- Building depreciation: $500,000 ÷ 39 years = $12,820/year
- Year 1 deduction: $12,820
With Cost Segregation
The study identifies:
- Personal property (5-year): $75,000 (15%)
- Land improvements (15-year): $50,000 (10%)
- Building (39-year): $375,000 (75%)
Year 1 deductions:
- Personal property: $75,000 × 100% bonus = $75,000
- Land improvements: $50,000 × 100% bonus = $50,000
- Building: $375,000 ÷ 39 = $9,615
Total Year 1 deduction: $134,615 (vs. $12,820 without the study)
At a 37% tax bracket, that's an extra $45,000+ in tax savings in year one alone.
Bonus Depreciation: The Multiplier
Cost segregation becomes incredibly powerful when combined with bonus depreciation, which allows you to deduct 100% of certain assets in the year they're placed in service.
Bonus Depreciation Phase-Out Schedule
| Year | Bonus Depreciation Rate |
|---|---|
| 2022 and earlier | 100% |
| 2023 | 80% |
| 2024 | 60% |
| 2025 | 40% |
| 2026 | 20% |
| 2027+ | 0% |
Important: If you're reading this in 2026, you can still get 20% bonus depreciation. But the window is closing fast. Properties placed in service in 2027 won't get any bonus depreciation unless Congress extends it.
This is why many DFW investors are accelerating property purchases and cost segregation studies now.
Who Should Consider Cost Segregation?
Ideal Candidates
- Property value of $500,000+ — The study costs typically make sense above this threshold
- High-income investors — You need income to offset; higher bracket means bigger savings
- Long-term hold strategy — You'll recapture depreciation when you sell, so plan to hold or 1031
- Commercial property owners — 39-year depreciation makes acceleration even more impactful
- Recent purchases or major renovations — You can do a "look-back" study for properties bought in prior years
When It Might Not Make Sense
- Properties under $300,000 — Study costs may eat up the benefit
- Low-income years — If you don't have income to offset, accelerated deductions provide less value
- Planning to sell soon — You'll face depreciation recapture sooner
- Passive investors without material participation — Passive loss limitations may delay the benefit
Look-Back Studies: It's Not Too Late
Bought a property years ago without doing a cost segregation study? You're not out of luck.
A "look-back" study allows you to catch up on missed depreciation from prior years. Under IRS rules, you can file a Form 3115 (change in accounting method) to claim all the accelerated depreciation you would have taken—in a single year.
Example:
- You bought a commercial property in 2022 for $800,000
- You've been depreciating it straight-line over 39 years
- A 2026 cost segregation study identifies $200,000 in short-lived assets
- You can claim the cumulative "catch-up" depreciation in 2026
No amended returns needed. No IRS permission required (it's automatic).
What Does a Cost Segregation Study Cost?
Study costs vary based on property size and complexity:
| Property Value | Typical Study Cost |
|---|---|
| $500K - $1M | $5,000 - $8,000 |
| $1M - $3M | $8,000 - $15,000 |
| $3M - $10M | $15,000 - $25,000 |
| $10M+ | $25,000+ |
ROI is typically 10:1 or better. A $7,000 study that generates $70,000 in first-year deductions (saving $25,000+ in taxes) is a no-brainer.
Some firms offer "desktop" studies for smaller properties at lower costs ($2,000-4,000), though they may be less thorough than a full engineering study.
The Depreciation Recapture Reality
Here's the catch: accelerated depreciation isn't free money. When you sell, you'll owe depreciation recapture tax on all the depreciation you've taken.
Depreciation recapture is taxed at up to 25%—higher than the 15-20% long-term capital gains rate.
However:
- Time value of money — A dollar saved today is worth more than a dollar paid in 10 years
- 1031 exchange — You can defer recapture indefinitely by exchanging into another property
- Stepped-up basis at death — If you hold until death, heirs may avoid recapture entirely
Cost segregation isn't tax elimination—it's tax deferral. But deferral can be incredibly valuable when used strategically.
How the Study Process Works
Step 1: Engagement
You hire a cost segregation firm (engineering firm, specialized CPA firm, or consultant). Provide them with:
- Purchase documents and settlement statements
- Building blueprints or floor plans
- Photos of the property
- Any renovation invoices
Step 2: Site Visit
For larger properties, an engineer visits to document and photograph components. For smaller properties, a desktop analysis using photos and blueprints may suffice.
Step 3: Analysis
The firm classifies every component of your property—from the HVAC system to the carpet to the parking lot lights—into the appropriate depreciation category.
Step 4: Report
You receive a detailed report documenting the reclassifications, which your CPA uses to prepare your tax return (or amend prior returns via Form 3115).
Step 5: Tax Filing
Your CPA incorporates the accelerated depreciation into your return. If it's a look-back study, they'll file Form 3115 to claim the catch-up deduction.
Real DFW Case Study
A Richardson investor bought a small strip center in 2024 for $1.2 million.
Before cost segregation:
- Annual depreciation: ~$28,000
- Tax savings (32% bracket): ~$8,960/year
After cost segregation:
- Study identified $360,000 in short-lived assets
- Year 1 depreciation (with 60% bonus in 2024): ~$245,000
- Tax savings in Year 1: ~$78,400
Study cost: $12,000 Net first-year benefit: $66,400
The study paid for itself 5x over in the first year alone.
Choosing a Cost Segregation Provider
Not all studies are created equal. A poorly documented study can trigger IRS scrutiny.
What to Look For
- Engineering credentials — Studies should be prepared or reviewed by licensed engineers
- IRS Audit Defense Guarantee — Reputable firms stand behind their work
- Detailed documentation — Reports should itemize every reclassification with supporting evidence
- Experience with your property type — Multifamily, retail, office, and industrial all have different considerations
Red Flags
- Studies that seem "too good to be true" (aggressive classifications)
- Firms that can't provide sample reports
- No engineering involvement
- Rock-bottom pricing (you get what you pay for)
Common Misconceptions
"I have to do a study when I buy"
Not true. Look-back studies let you capture benefits from properties you've owned for years.
"My property is too small"
For properties over $300,000, it's worth at least getting a feasibility analysis. Many firms offer free assessments.
"It triggers audits"
Cost segregation is explicitly permitted by IRS guidelines. As long as your study is properly documented, it's defensible.
"I'll lose the deduction when I sell"
You will face recapture, but the time value of money and 1031 exchange options make acceleration worthwhile for most long-term investors.
The Bottom Line
Cost segregation is one of the most powerful tax strategies for real estate investors—yet most DFW landlords have never heard of it.
If you own rental property worth $500,000+, it's worth at least running the numbers. The ROI on these studies is typically 10:1 or better.
But here's the urgency: Bonus depreciation drops to 20% in 2026 and disappears entirely in 2027 (unless Congress acts). If you've been thinking about this, the window is closing.
Own property in Frisco, Plano, Richardson, or anywhere in DFW? Let's see if a cost segregation study makes sense for you—takes about 15 minutes to assess.
— Krystal Le, CPA
LeCPA helps real estate investors across Plano, Richardson, Frisco, Carrollton, and Dallas minimize taxes through strategic planning.

Krystal Le, CPA
Founder, LeCPA | Accounting & Tax
Krystal has over a decade of experience helping DFW small business owners, real estate investors, and high-income professionals minimize their tax burden and build wealth strategically.
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