5 Signs Your Rental Property Needs a Cost Segregation Study
Sign 1: You Purchased a Property Worth $200,000 or More
The most straightforward indicator is property value. If your rental property has a depreciable cost basis (purchase price minus land value) of $200,000 or more, a cost segregation study will almost certainly generate tax savings that far exceed the cost of the study. Even properties in the $150,000-$200,000 range can be strong candidates, depending on the property type and your tax situation.
The higher the property value, the larger the potential benefit. A $500,000 property can yield $100,000 or more in accelerated deductions, while a $1 million property can generate $200,000+ in first-year deductions when combined with bonus depreciation.
Sign 2: You Are in a High Tax Bracket
Cost segregation creates tax deductions, and the value of a deduction depends on your marginal tax rate. If you are in the 32%, 35%, or 37% federal bracket, every dollar of accelerated depreciation saves you $0.32 to $0.37 in federal taxes alone. Add state income taxes and the savings can be even more significant.
High-income professionals, business owners, and dual-income households are ideal candidates for cost segregation because the deductions offset income that would otherwise be taxed at the highest rates.
Sign 3: Your Property Is Fully Furnished
Furnished properties, especially short-term rentals, contain a significantly higher percentage of components eligible for accelerated depreciation. Furniture, appliances, decor, electronics, hot tubs, outdoor entertainment areas, and specialty fixtures are all classified as 5 or 7-year property. A fully furnished vacation rental can have 30-40% of its cost basis reclassified, compared to 20-25% for an unfurnished long-term rental.
Sign 4: You Have Owned the Property for Multiple Years Without a Study
If you purchased your rental property years ago and have been depreciating it straight-line without a cost segregation study, you have been leaving money on the table every year. The good news is that a look-back study allows you to claim all missed accelerated depreciation from prior years in a single tax year using IRS Form 3115, without needing to amend previous returns.
The longer you have owned the property without a study, the larger the catch-up deduction will be. An investor who has owned a $400,000 property for five years without a cost segregation study might claim $50,000 to $80,000 in previously unclaimed accelerated depreciation in a single year.
Sign 5: You Plan to Buy More Properties
If you are building a rental property portfolio, establishing a cost segregation strategy from the beginning sets you up for long-term tax efficiency. By conducting studies on each property as you acquire it, you create a systematic approach to maximizing deductions and managing your overall tax liability. Portfolio investors also benefit from volume pricing, making each individual study more cost-effective.