Cost Segregation is a detailed tax strategy that breaks down the cost of your property into separate components for tax purposes, allowing you to accelerate depreciation by identifying and separating assets that wear out faster than the standard 27.5 (residential) or 39 (commercial) year periods. This is a game-changer for new real estate investors because it allows you to write off a portion of the property's value sooner, resulting in bigger, upfront tax savings.
For example, a Cost Segregation study on a $1 million property might uncover $200,000 worth of items (like carpets, appliances, and landscaping) that can be reclassified into shorter, faster depreciating class lives (5, 7, or 15 years) and written off in the first few years. Even if you have already started depreciating your property, it is not too late; you can still perform a study and claim a “catch-up adjustment.”
Cost Segregation Explained for New Owners
- Definition: Cost Segregation is a detailed analysis that breaks down the total cost of a property into its individual components for tax purposes.
- Standard Depreciation: Property is normally depreciated over 27.5 years (residential) or 39 years (commercial).
- The “Cool Part”: Assets like carpets, appliances, and landscaping wear out faster than the building structure and have shorter tax lives (typically 5, 7, or 15 years).
- Acceleration: The study identifies and separates these shorter-life items so you can write them off sooner, which means bigger tax savings upfront.
- Example Benefit: On a $1 million property, a study might uncover $200,000 worth of items that can be written off in the first few years.
- Timing Flexibility: It is not too late to apply the strategy; even if you have started depreciating, you can still do a catch-up adjustment to claim missed deductions.



