Most small business owners do not think of themselves as real estate investors. But if you own the building your business operates out of, or you are considering buying one to escape rising rent, you are sitting on one of the most powerful and underused tax strategies in the federal code. It is called cost segregation, and on a typical owner-occupied commercial property, it can deliver six-figure first-year federal tax savings against a study cost of a few thousand dollars.
Most CPAs do not bring it up. Most business owners have never heard of it. The result is millions of dollars in legal, IRS-tested tax savings sitting on the table every year, especially for owners of trades shops, dental offices, manufacturing facilities, professional services buildings, medical offices, and small mixed-use properties. Here is what cost segregation actually does, when it works, and how to think about it as a business owner.
| Key Takeaways
Cost segregation accelerates depreciation. It moves a meaningful portion of your commercial property’s cost basis out of the 39-year depreciation schedule into 5, 7, and 15-year buckets that deduct in Year 1. Owner-occupied buildings are ideal candidates. When the building owner is also the operator of the business inside it, the depreciation deduction flows directly against active business income without passive activity restrictions. First-year federal savings often clear $100,000. On a $1,000,000 commercial property, a typical study produces $250,000 to $350,000 of Year-1 deductions and $90,000 to $130,000 in federal tax savings at higher brackets. Study costs run $2,000 to $9,000 depending on provider. Virtual-visit studies from small-property specialist firms are the lowest cost. In-person studies from larger accounting firms cost more but produce the same Year-1 outcome. It is legal, IRS-tested, and grounded in decades of case law. The IRS provides a published Audit Technique Guide for cost segregation studies, and a properly engineered study carries full audit defense. The strategy works on properties you already own. If you bought your commercial building one, five, or even fifteen years ago and never did a study, you can file a lookback study and catch up the missed depreciation in a single year, no amended returns required. |
What cost segregation actually is

When you buy a commercial property, the IRS lets you deduct a portion of the building’s cost each year as depreciation. For commercial real estate, that depreciation is spread over 39 years on a straight-line basis. On a $1,000,000 property, that works out to roughly $25,600 per year of deduction. Useful, but slow.
A cost segregation study breaks the property down into its actual physical components. The structural shell (foundation, framing, roof, exterior walls) stays on the 39-year schedule because it has a long useful life. But everything else inside and around the building (interior finishes, fixtures, electrical systems serving specific equipment, plumbing serving specific tenant needs, cabinetry, flooring, signage, parking lot, landscaping, fencing, exterior lighting) has a much shorter useful life and the IRS allows it to be depreciated over 5, 7, or 15 years instead of 39.
Under current federal law, 100% of those reclassified short-life components can be deducted in Year 1 as bonus depreciation. That means a building that would have produced $25,600 of depreciation in its first year on the straight-line schedule can produce $250,000 to $350,000 of Year-1 deductions with a proper study. At a 37% federal marginal tax bracket, that translates to roughly $90,000 to $130,000 in actual federal tax savings the year you buy the property or place it in service.
The strategy was formally validated by the U.S. Tax Court in 1997 (Hospital Corporation of America v. Commissioner), the IRS published a detailed Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide in 2004 (updated multiple times since, most recently in February 2025), and the methodology has been used by major property owners ever since. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 and the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 expanded the bonus depreciation benefit further, making it more valuable than at any prior point in U.S. tax history.
Why owner-occupied commercial property is the sweet spot
Cost segregation generates a tax deduction, but for that deduction to actually offset your active business income (rather than being banked for a future year as a passive loss), the activity has to qualify under specific IRS rules. For a business owner who owns the building their business operates out of, that qualification is usually automatic.
When you are materially participating in the business that occupies the building (which any owner-operator already is), the depreciation deduction from the building flows through against your active business income. There is no “passive activity” limitation, no real estate professional status requirement, no short-term rental loophole needed. The deduction simply reduces the taxable income from the operating business.
That is meaningfully different from a typical rental property scenario, where the owner has to clear separate IRS tests to use the deduction. For an owner-occupied dental practice, manufacturing facility, contractor shop, professional services building, or retail storefront, the path is direct. The depreciation deduction from the building offsets the business income, the tax bill drops, and the cash savings stay in the business.
When cost segregation makes sense (and when it does not)
Cost segregation is not the right move for every property, and the economics depend on a few specific factors. Here is the rough framework.
Property value above $500,000. Below this threshold, the absolute Year-1 deduction tends to be small enough that the study cost eats too much of the benefit. Above $500,000, the math almost always works.
Plan to hold for at least 5 to 7 years. When you eventually sell, the reclassified components get “recaptured” and taxed as ordinary income. For short holding periods, that recapture can erode the original benefit. For long holds, or for a 1031 exchange into another property, the benefit largely stays intact.
You have active business income to absorb the deduction. If the owner-operator’s business is profitable, the deduction directly reduces taxable income and cash taxes paid. If the business is currently breakeven or losing money, the deduction carries forward and creates value in the first profitable year.
If those three conditions are in place, the question stops being “does it make sense?” and starts being “which provider and when?”. You can also catch up missed depreciation on properties you already own. The IRS allows owners to file a lookback study in any future tax year using Form 3115, which pulls all the missed prior-year depreciation into a single Section 481(a) catch-up deduction in the year of change. No amended returns required. Owners who bought commercial property between 2018 and 2023 without a study are often particularly strong lookback candidates because the missed depreciation has compounded over several years.
What does a cost segregation study cost?
Study pricing varies widely by provider model and property complexity. For a typical owner-occupied small commercial building (under 10,000 square feet, single-tenant or owner-operated), there are two main provider categories.
Virtual-visit studies from small-property specialist firms: $2,000 to $5,000. Specialized firms perform engineering-based cost segregation studies using a virtual site visit, where the property owner submits photos, videos, and property documentation that the engineering team reviews remotely. The methodology is identical to an on-site study in terms of IRS compliance and audit defense; the delivery model is just streamlined for smaller properties.
In-person studies from larger accounting firms: $7,000 to $9,000 or more. Traditional providers, including the cost segregation arms of regional and Big 4 accounting firms, build an in-person engineering site visit into their fee structure. The deliverable is the same study and the same Year-1 outcome, but the price point reflects firm overhead and the on-site engineering visit.
On a property in the $500,000 to $2,000,000 range, the virtual-visit model from a small-property specialist firm typically produces the same Year-1 tax benefit at a significantly lower price point. Against $90,000 to $130,000 in Year-1 federal savings on a $1,000,000 property, even the most expensive in-person study clears the cost of the study many times over in the first year. The economics are essentially never the constraint on whether to do the study.
How cost segregation fits into broader business strategy
For a small business owner, cost segregation does not exist in isolation. It plugs into a few broader decisions worth thinking through alongside it.
If you are still deciding whether to buy or continue renting your business space, the Year-1 tax savings from cost segregation can materially change the math on the buy-vs-rent decision. A $100,000+ federal tax savings in the year of purchase effectively reduces the all-in cost of acquiring the building, and on a properly structured deal, can substantially offset the down payment in the first year. The same broader framework that applies to evaluating any investment property for your business still applies, but cost segregation belongs in that pro forma from day one.
If you already own the building, cost segregation is one of the smart, immediate ways to find more money in a business without changing operations. The cash freed up by the federal tax savings can fund equipment purchases, working capital, hiring, or simply paying down high-interest debt. It is one of the few profit-improvement levers available to a business owner that does not require selling more or working harder.
And if you are running a business that feels profitable on paper but never seems to produce the cash you expected, missed depreciation on real estate is often one of the quiet profit leaks that go unaddressed for years. A lookback study can recover several years of unclaimed depreciation in a single tax year, which can produce a meaningful one-time cash injection in the year the change is filed.
Bottom line for business owners
If you own (or are considering buying) the commercial building your business operates out of, cost segregation is one of the highest-ROI tax strategies legally available to you. On a $1,000,000 property held by an owner-operator in a 37% federal bracket, an engineering-based study can deliver $90,000 to $130,000 in Year-1 federal tax savings against a study cost of $2,000 to $9,000 depending on provider model. The strategy is well-established, IRS-tested, and especially well-suited to the owner-occupied commercial properties that small business owners typically buy.
The two things to plan around before commissioning a study: hold the property for at least 5 to 7 years (or eventually 1031 exchange) to protect against recapture, and make sure the operating business has the active income to absorb the deduction. With those in place, the federal tax savings from a single commercial property purchase will often clear six figures in the year the building is placed in service.

Frequently Asked Questions
Does cost segregation work on the commercial building my business operates out of?
Yes, and in fact owner-occupied commercial property is one of the strongest use cases. When you are materially participating in the business that occupies the building (which any owner-operator already is), the depreciation deduction from the building flows directly against your active business income without the passive activity limitations that affect typical rental property owners.
How long does a cost segregation study take to complete?
For a typical small commercial property, a virtual-visit study from a specialist firm takes 2 to 4 weeks from kickoff to final report. An in-person study from a larger accounting firm typically takes 6 to 10 weeks. Both deliverables include a full engineering report that can be handed directly to your CPA for use in preparing the current-year tax return.
Can I do cost segregation on a building I bought years ago?
Yes. The IRS allows owners to file a lookback study in any future tax year using Form 3115, which pulls all missed prior-year depreciation into a single catch-up deduction in the year of change. No amended returns are required. Properties bought between 2018 and 2023 without a study are often particularly strong lookback candidates because of the high bonus depreciation rates available in those years.
What happens to the tax savings if I sell the building later?
When the property is eventually sold, the reclassified short-life components get “recaptured” and taxed as ordinary income, and the building shell is subject to a capped recapture rate. For short holding periods (under 5 years), recapture can erode a meaningful portion of the original Year-1 benefit. For long holds or 1031 exchanges into another property, the benefit largely stays intact and the strategy remains net-positive.
How do I tell if cost segregation is worth it for my specific property?
Most reputable engineering-based cost segregation firms provide a free benefit estimate before any engagement. The estimate is based on basic property information (purchase price, year acquired, property type, square footage, location) and produces a projection of Year-1 deductions and federal tax savings. If the projected savings do not justify the study cost by a wide margin, you do not commission the study. In practice, properties above $500,000 in commercial value almost always clear the threshold.
About the author
Max Segal is the Co-Founder of an engineering-based cost segregation firm specializing in 1-to-10-unit residential rentals and small commercial properties nationwide. With a background in real estate investing as well as private company accounting and tax strategy, Max guides property owners in turning cost segregation studies into substantial first-year tax savings.



