Cost Segregation ROI: 10-20x Returns by Property Type

Is a cost seg study worth it? We break down ROI with real examples, from a $500K SFR to a $2M commercial property. Most investors see 10-20x returns.

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Cost segregation ROI = (Year 1 tax savings − study cost) ÷ study cost. On a $500K single-family rental at the 37% tax bracket, a study typically reclassifies $80K–$120K into 5, 7, and 15-year property — producing $26K–$44K in first-year tax savings against a $795 study cost. That’s 32x–55x ROI. For $2M+ commercial properties, Year 1 benefits often exceed $95K.

The return on investment for a cost segregation study is calculated as (Year 1 tax savings from accelerated depreciation minus study cost) divided by study cost. For a $500,000 single-family rental, a cost segregation study typically reclassifies $80,000 to $120,000 from the 27.5-year schedule into 5-year and 15-year property. With 100% bonus depreciation and a 37% tax rate, that produces $26,000 to $44,000 in first-year tax savings against a study cost of $795–$895 — an ROI of 30x to 55x. For a $750,000 short-term rental with heavy furnishings, first-year savings commonly reach $40,000 to $65,000. For a $2 million commercial property on a 39-year schedule, the reclassification is even larger, with Year 1 benefits often exceeding $95,000. At modern pricing ($495–$1,895 for residential, $995–$2,995 for commercial), cost segregation produces positive ROI on virtually any investment property above $200,000 in value.

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We built a comprehensive guide covering minimum property values, expected returns, and when cost segregation doesn’t make sense. Read the Full Analysis →

The ROI Formula: Simple Math, Big Results

The return on investment for a cost segregation study is straightforward to calculate:

ROI = (Tax Savings from Accelerated Depreciation − Study Cost) / Study Cost

The tax savings come from reclassifying portions of your property’s depreciable basis from the standard 27.5-year (residential) or 39-year (commercial) schedule into shorter 5-year, 7-year, and 15-year categories. When you combine that reclassification with bonus depreciation, a significant portion of those deductions can be taken in Year 1 rather than being spread over decades.

The study cost is fixed and known upfront. At Cost Seg Smart, residential studies start at $495. Commercial properties start at $1,495. These are a fraction of what traditional engineering firms charge, which makes the ROI math even more compelling.

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Let’s walk through three real-world scenarios.

Example 1: The $500K Single-Family Rental

Meet the bread-and-butter investment property. A $500,000 single-family rental, built in 2005, purchased as a long-term rental. Here is how the numbers work:

  • Purchase price: $500,000
  • Land allocation (20%): $100,000
  • Depreciable basis: $400,000
  • Reclassification rate (typical SFR, mid-age): 18%
  • Amount reclassified to accelerated categories: $72,000
  • Bonus depreciation (100%, restored by OBBBA): $72,000 in Year 1
  • Year 1 tax savings at 37% bracket: $26,640
  • Total accelerated tax savings (all years): $26,640
  • Study cost: starting at $495

The Year 1 ROI alone is 33x — you spend $795 and save $26,640 in the first year. With 100% bonus depreciation restored by the OBBBA, the entire reclassified amount is deducted in Year 1. That is a 33x return on a $795 investment.

Even if you are in a lower tax bracket — say 32% — the Year 1 savings would still be $23,040, which is a 29x return. No matter how you slice it, a $795 study generating five figures in tax savings is a compelling investment.

Key insight: You do not need to be in the highest tax bracket for cost segregation to deliver a strong ROI. Even at a 24% marginal rate, the study typically pays for itself 8-12x over for properties in this price range. The math works at almost every bracket.

Example 2: The $750K Furnished Short-Term Rental

Now let’s look at where cost segregation really shines: short-term rentals. STRs have two advantages that dramatically increase the reclassification rate. First, they contain far more personal property — furniture, electronics, kitchen equipment, entertainment systems, hospitality-grade fixtures. Second, they often have significant land improvements like pools, hot tubs, outdoor kitchens, landscaping, and paved areas.

  • Purchase price: $750,000
  • Land allocation (20%): $150,000
  • Depreciable basis: $600,000
  • Reclassification rate (furnished STR, mid-age): 27%
  • Amount reclassified to accelerated categories: $162,000
  • Bonus depreciation (100%, restored by OBBBA): $162,000 in Year 1
  • Year 1 tax savings at 37% bracket: $59,940
  • Total accelerated tax savings (all years): $59,940
  • Study cost: starting at $495

Year 1 ROI: over 75x. With 100% bonus depreciation, the full $162,000 in reclassified basis is deducted immediately, generating close to $60,000 in Year 1 tax savings from a study starting at $495. And for STR owners who materially participate in the property (average guest stay of 7 days or fewer, with documented involvement in operations), those losses may be classified as non-passive — meaning they can potentially offset W-2 or other active income.

This is why STR investors are the single largest customer segment for cost segregation studies. The combination of high reclassification rates, bonus depreciation, and the material participation loophole creates a tax strategy that is hard to match anywhere else in real estate.

tax documents laptop desk

Example 3: The $2M Commercial Office Building

Commercial properties depreciate over 39 years instead of 27.5, which means even more depreciation is being deferred without a cost segregation study. The dollar amounts here are larger, and the absolute tax savings are significant even though the reclassification percentage can be somewhat lower than residential.

  • Purchase price: $2,000,000
  • Land allocation (20%): $400,000
  • Depreciable basis: $1,600,000
  • Reclassification rate (office, mid-age): 16%
  • Amount reclassified to accelerated categories: $256,000
  • Bonus depreciation (100%, restored by OBBBA): $256,000 in Year 1
  • Year 1 tax savings at 37% bracket: $94,720
  • Total accelerated tax savings (all years): $94,720
  • Study cost: $1,495

Year 1 ROI: 63x. With 100% bonus depreciation, the entire $256,000 in reclassified basis is deducted in Year 1, generating nearly $95,000 in tax savings from a $1,495 study. For larger commercial properties in the $5M+ range, these numbers scale accordingly — it is not uncommon to see six-figure Year 1 deductions from a single cost segregation study.

The Time Value of Money: Why Acceleration Matters

Some skeptics point out that cost segregation does not create new deductions — it simply moves them forward in time. That is technically correct. But it misses the entire point.

Without cost segregation, you depreciate the entire building over 27.5 or 39 years in equal annual installments. With cost segregation and 100% bonus depreciation, you pull a significant chunk of those deductions into Year 1. The question is: what is a dollar of tax savings worth today versus 20 years from now?

Consider our $500K SFR example. Without cost segregation, you would deduct approximately $14,545 per year for 27.5 years ($400,000 / 27.5). With cost segregation and 100% bonus depreciation, you claim an additional $72,000 in Year 1 on top of your regular depreciation. At a 37% tax bracket, that is $26,640 you can reinvest immediately — into another property, into the stock market, into paying down debt. That money compounds over time.

If you invest that $26,640 at even a modest 8% annual return, it grows to over $124,000 in 20 years. That is the real cost of not doing a cost segregation study: it is not just the tax savings you miss, it is the compounding growth on those savings over decades.

accountant calculator spreadsheet

When the ROI Is Lower

Cost segregation delivers strong returns for most investment properties, but there are scenarios where the ROI is smaller. Being honest about these cases helps you make an informed decision:

  • Condos and townhomes: Because you only own the interior unit (not the roof, exterior walls, site improvements, or landscaping), the reclassification rate is typically lower — often 11-14% versus 18-22% for a single-family home. The study still pays for itself, but the multiple is lower.
  • Very new construction (2020 or later): Newer properties tend to have lower reclassification rates because fewer components have been added, modified, or renovated. A brand-new build with minimal landscaping and basic finishes will have less to reclassify than a 2005 property with a finished basement, mature landscaping, and upgraded fixtures.
  • Properties under $200K: The math still works, but the absolute dollar savings may be modest enough that some investors question whether it is worth the effort. A $150K property might generate $2,000-$4,000 in total accelerated tax savings — still a strong multiple on a study starting at $495, but not the five-figure savings that get investors excited.

Honest take: If your property is a condo purchased for under $200K with basic finishes, a cost segregation study will still likely deliver a positive ROI, but the savings may be in the $1,500-$3,000 range. For properties in this tier, talk to your CPA about whether the administrative effort is worth it for your specific tax situation.

When the ROI Is Highest

On the other end of the spectrum, certain property types and situations deliver outsized returns from cost segregation:

  • Older properties (pre-2000): More renovations, more fixtures, more land improvements, more components to reclassify. A 1990s property typically has 3-5 percentage points higher reclassification than a post-2015 property.
  • Furnished STRs: Furniture, appliances, electronics, linens, outdoor entertainment — all of this is 5-year or 7-year property. A fully furnished STR can add 6+ percentage points to the reclassification rate compared to an unfurnished property.
  • Properties over $500K: The reclassification percentage stays roughly the same, but the dollar amounts become increasingly significant. A 20% reclassification rate on a $1M property is $160,000 in accelerated basis — generating potential tax savings of $23,000+ in Year 1 alone.
  • Restaurants and medical offices: These commercial property types have specialized equipment, finishes, and fixtures that push reclassification rates into the 20-28% range — higher than standard office or retail.
  • Properties you plan to hold long-term: The longer you hold, the more years you benefit from the accelerated schedule versus straight-line, and the more time your tax savings have to compound.

The sweet spot: If you own a furnished STR or an older property valued at $500K or more, a cost segregation study is one of the highest-ROI investments you can make as a real estate investor. We routinely see 20-50x returns in this category.

The Bonus Depreciation Factor: 100% Is Back

Thanks to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed in July 2025, bonus depreciation is back at 100% for qualified property acquired and placed in service after January 19, 2025. That means the full reclassified amount can be deducted immediately in Year 1. This is the best environment for cost segregation since the original TCJA 100% window (2018-2022).

Let’s put it in perspective using our STR example: at 100% bonus depreciation, the $162,000 in reclassified basis is fully deducted in Year 1. Without cost segregation, you would have deducted approximately $21,818 in regular depreciation ($600,000 / 27.5). Cost segregation delivers nearly 8x your first-year deduction.

With 100% bonus depreciation, there is no remaining balance to spread over subsequent years — the entire reclassified amount hits your tax return in Year 1. This makes the case for cost segregation stronger than it has been in years.

person signing financial documents

What About Depreciation Recapture?

Fair question. When you sell, the IRS recaptures depreciation at up to 25% under Section 1250. So you are not eliminating taxes — you are deferring and restructuring them. But here is why that still delivers a positive ROI:

  • Tax arbitrage: You deduct at your ordinary income rate (up to 37%) and recapture at 25%. That 12-point spread is pure savings.
  • Time value: A dollar saved today and invested for 10-20 years is worth far more than a dollar paid in recapture upon sale.
  • 1031 exchanges: Many investors never trigger recapture because they use Section 1031 to defer gains indefinitely by exchanging into replacement properties.
  • Step-up in basis: If you hold until death, your heirs receive a stepped-up basis that eliminates accumulated depreciation recapture entirely.

Depreciation recapture is a real consideration, and your CPA should model it as part of your overall strategy. But for the vast majority of investors, the net benefit of cost segregation is overwhelmingly positive even after accounting for recapture.

The Bottom Line

For most investment properties valued above $300,000, a cost segregation study delivers a return on investment that is difficult to find anywhere else in real estate. The math is not ambiguous:

  • A $500K SFR generates roughly $10,000+ in Year 1 tax savings on a study starting at $495
  • A $750K furnished STR generates roughly $24,000+ in Year 1 tax savings on a study starting at $495
  • A $2M commercial property generates roughly $38,000+ in Year 1 tax savings on a $1,495 study

These are not hypothetical projections. They are based on the reclassification rates that engineering-based cost segregation studies consistently produce across thousands of properties. The only variable is your specific tax bracket and property characteristics.

If you have been wondering whether a cost segregation study is worth it, the answer for the vast majority of investment property owners is clear: it is one of the best-returning investments you will make this year. The study pays for itself in the first year, usually many times over, and the benefits continue to compound for years to come.

Cost Seg Smart is the modern cost segregation company. Reports delivered in under an hour — not six weeks. Starting at $495, not $5,000. This isn’t just for people who can afford five-figure studies. Everyone who owns rental property should be doing this. You can get it done right now.

Frequently Asked Questions What ROI should I expect from a cost segregation study?

Most investment properties above $300,000 produce a 10-50x return on the cost of the study. A $500K SFR typically generates $10,000+ in Year 1 tax savings on a study starting at $495. A $750K furnished STR generates roughly $24,000+ in Year 1 savings. A $2M commercial property generates approximately $38,000+ on a $1,495 study. These returns are based on typical reclassification rates applied to the depreciable basis at a 37% marginal tax rate, with 100% bonus depreciation. Which property types produce the highest cost segregation ROI?

Furnished short-term rentals and older properties (pre-2000) consistently deliver the highest returns. Furnished STRs add 6+ percentage points to reclassification rates because furniture, electronics, and amenities are all 5-year property. Restaurants and medical offices have the highest commercial reclassification rates (20-28%) due to specialized equipment. Properties over $500K produce larger absolute dollar savings. The sweet spot for ROI is a furnished STR or older property valued at $500K or more, where 20-50x returns are typical. Does depreciation recapture reduce the ROI of cost segregation?

Recapture reduces the net benefit but does not eliminate it. You face recapture regardless of whether you use cost segregation. The incremental recapture attributable to cost segregation is typically $10,000-$24,000 on a $750K property, while the Year 1 tax savings are approximately $64,000. After compounding that savings over a 7-year hold at 8%, the net benefit after recapture is approximately $85,000. Using a 1031 exchange defers recapture indefinitely, and a stepped-up basis at death eliminates it entirely. How much does a cost segregation study cost?

Cost Seg Smart delivers engineering-based studies starting at $495 for residential properties under $300K, $795 for $300K-$1M, and $1,195 for $1M-$2M. Commercial studies start at $995. Reports are delivered in under one hour using the same RSMeans construction cost data as traditional firms that charge $5,000-$15,000. Every study includes a CPA-Ready Guarantee and component-level breakdowns with IRS asset class citations. No site visit is required.

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