Estimate how much a cost segregation study could accelerate into year one — and the tax it could save — now that 100% bonus depreciation is permanent again.
Total acquisition cost of the property (building + land).
Land isn't depreciable. Often 15–25% of the price.
Share of the building a study moves to shorter recovery periods. Typically 20–35%.
The 2025 law made 100% bonus depreciation permanent.
| Year-1 depreciation | Deduction | Tax saved |
|---|---|---|
| Without cost segregation (straight-line) | — | — |
| With cost segregation (+ bonus) | — | — |
| Additional year-1 benefit | — | — |
Accelerated depreciation is largely a deferral: it lowers basis and is recaptured at sale. Its value is the time value of money — and a future 1031 exchange can defer that recapture. Read the cost-seg memo →
A building is normally depreciated slowly and evenly — 27.5 years for residential rental, 39 for commercial. A cost segregation study uses an engineering analysis to carve the building into components — fixtures, flooring, land improvements, specialized systems — that legitimately belong on much shorter 5-, 7-, and 15-year schedules.
Accelerated depreciation lowers your basis, so more gain is recaptured when you sell — at up to 25% (and some §1245 components at ordinary rates). A later 1031 exchange can defer that recapture. Model both ends before committing, and have a qualified firm perform the study.
Cost segregation works on DST property too, because a DST is a grantor trust and you're treated as a direct owner of the real estate. Some DSTs come with a study already done — the sponsor commissions it and the accelerated depreciation flows through on your grantor letter automatically. For DSTs that don't, you can order your own study on your fractional interest, coordinating with the sponsor for the property data. Watch the 1031 basis split: generally only the excess basis (cash invested beyond your deferred gain) is eligible for acceleration and bonus depreciation. How cost segregation works with DSTs →
This tool is for general educational purposes only. It produces a simplified estimate, not tax advice, and omits many situational rules (stacking with other income, AMT, state-specific treatment, partial-year and like-kind nuances). Your actual tax depends on your full return. Always confirm with your CPA before acting.