Investment Strategy

Cost Segregation for House Hackers: Yes, It Works on Your Duplex

November 20, 2025 8 min read Cost Seg Smart Team

House hackers can claim cost segregation on the rental portion of their duplex, triplex, or fourplex — even while living in one unit. The study allocates the full building into MACRS classes, then you deduct the portion corresponding to rented units. A fourplex where you occupy one unit allows cost seg on 75% of the depreciable basis, often generating $15K–$40K in Year 1 deductions.

House hacking is the smartest way to start in real estate. Buy a duplex, triplex, or fourplex. Live in one unit. Rent the rest. (See our full multifamily cost segregation guide.) Your tenants pay your mortgage. You build equity while sleeping.

But most house hackers miss the biggest tax play available to them: cost segregation on the rental portion. And it is not even close to a small benefit — we are talking $10,000 to $30,000+ in Year 1 tax savings on a single property. At $995 for a duplex study, the ROI is obscene.

How Cost Segregation Works on a House Hack

Here is the key rule: you can only depreciate the rental portion of your property. The unit you live in is your primary residence — no depreciation. But the other units? Those are rental property, and they qualify for cost segregation just like any other rental.

The math is simple:

That "rental portion" is what gets the cost segregation treatment. And with 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored (OBBBA, signed July 2025), every dollar of reclassified 5-year, 7-year, and 15-year property is deducted in full in Year 1.

The Duplex Math

Let us walk through the most common house hack — a duplex.

Item Amount
Purchase price $450,000
Rental portion (50%) $225,000
Land allocation (20%) $45,000
Depreciable rental basis $180,000
Cost seg reclassification (25%) $45,000
Year 1 accelerated deduction (100% bonus) $45,000
Tax savings at 32% rate $14,400
Cost seg study (duplex pricing) $995
ROI on the study 14.5x

$995 for the study. $14,400 in Year 1 tax savings. On a duplex. While you live there for free (or close to it, because your tenant is paying most of the mortgage). House hacking is already brilliant. House hacking with cost seg is next level.

duplex house two doors

Triplex and Fourplex: Even Better Numbers

The more units you rent out, the more depreciable basis you have — and the bigger your cost seg benefit.

Property Duplex ($450K) Fourplex ($650K)
Rental portion 50% ($225K) 75% ($487.5K)
Depreciable basis (after land) $180,000 $390,000
Cost seg reclassification $45,000 $97,500
Year 1 tax savings (32%) $14,400 $31,200
Study cost $995 $995
ROI 14.5x 31.4x

A fourplex house hack with cost segregation generates $31,200 in Year 1 tax savings on a $995 study. That is a 31x return. Show me another investment that does that.

Think about it: You are living essentially mortgage-free (tenants are paying), building equity, and getting a $14,000-$31,000 tax refund in Year 1. And you paid less than $1,000 for the cost seg study. This is the most underused tax strategy in the house hacking playbook.

Can You Do Cost Seg on an FHA Property?

Yes. This is one of the most common questions, and the answer is straightforward.

FHA loans require you to live in one unit of the property. They do not prevent you from claiming depreciation on the rental units. FHA is a financing requirement, not a tax rule. The IRS does not care how you financed the property — they care about how you use it.

If one unit is your primary residence and the other units are rented out, the rental portion qualifies for depreciation and cost segregation. End of story. Your loan type is irrelevant to the tax treatment.

Same goes for VA loans, conventional owner-occupied loans, and any other financing that requires occupancy. You can live there and still depreciate the rental portion.

When to Run the Study

Year 1. The year you buy the property and place the rental units in service (i.e., the year tenants move in or the units are available for rent).

With 100% bonus depreciation permanently back thanks to OBBBA, the full accelerated deduction hits your tax return in the year of acquisition. Waiting means you lose the time value of the money — dollars in your pocket today are worth more than dollars in your pocket three years from now.

If you already own a house hack and never did a cost seg study, you can still do a lookback study. File a Form 3115 (change in accounting method) and catch up on all the depreciation you missed. It is not too late — but do it now.

Pro tip: If you close on your house hack in December, make sure at least one rental unit is placed in service (available for rent) before December 31. That allows you to claim the full Year 1 cost seg deduction on that year's tax return.

What If You Move Out Later?

This is where house hacking gets even more interesting from a tax perspective.

When you move out of your unit and convert it to a rental, the entire property is now investment property. That means the unit you used to live in is now depreciable too. You can run a new cost segregation study (or an updated study) on the full property and claim accelerated depreciation on the previously non-depreciable portion.

The playbook:

  1. Buy a fourplex with FHA (3.5% down)
  2. Live in one unit, rent three units
  3. Run cost seg on the 75% rental portion — collect $31K in tax savings
  4. After a year, move out. Convert your unit to rental.
  5. Run a lookback cost seg study on the now-100% rental property — collect additional tax savings on the remaining 25%

You have now cost seg-ed the entire property, collected tax savings at every stage, and still only put 3.5% down on a fourplex. This is how people build real wealth in real estate.

The Bottom Line

House hacking is already the smartest entry point into real estate investing. Adding cost segregation makes it even smarter. The tax savings from a single study can cover months of mortgage payments, fund your next down payment, or just put cash back in your pocket.

Cost Seg Smart is the modern cost segregation company. Duplex, triplex, and fourplex studies start at $995. Reports delivered in under an hour. CPA-ready, IRS-aligned, with a money-back guarantee if your CPA rejects the report. Everyone who owns a multi-unit property — house hack or not — should be doing this.

You bought a duplex to hack your housing costs. Now hack your taxes too. $995. Under an hour. Make it make sense not to.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I do cost segregation on a house hack if I live in one unit?

Yes, but only on the rental portion. If you live in one unit of a duplex and rent the other, 50% of the property qualifies for depreciation and cost segregation. For a triplex where you occupy one unit, 67% qualifies. For a fourplex, 75%. The IRS requires you to allocate the depreciable basis by the rental percentage. Your unit -- the one you live in -- is a personal residence and not depreciable. If you later move out and convert your unit to a rental, the entire property becomes eligible for cost segregation at that point.

Does FHA financing prevent me from using cost segregation?

No. FHA is a financing requirement, not a tax rule. The IRS does not consider how you financed the property when determining depreciation eligibility. FHA, VA, conventional, and any other loan type with an occupancy requirement simply means you must live in one unit. The rental units still qualify for depreciation and cost segregation regardless of the loan. The same applies to VA loans and conventional owner-occupied financing.

How much can a house hacker save with cost segregation on a fourplex?

On a $600K fourplex where you live in one unit, 75% of the property ($450K) is depreciable. A cost segregation study typically reclassifies 18-22% of the depreciable basis into accelerated categories. With 100% bonus depreciation, that produces roughly $60,000-$75,000 in Year 1 accelerated deductions on the rental portion alone. At a 37% marginal rate, that translates to $22,000-$28,000 in Year 1 tax savings. Cost Seg Smart delivers duplex, triplex, and fourplex studies starting at $995, with reports in under one hour.

What happens when I move out of my house hack unit?

When you convert your former primary residence unit to a rental, the entire property becomes investment property. The unit you previously lived in is now depreciable. You can run a new or updated cost segregation study to claim accelerated depreciation on the previously non-depreciable portion. If the property was already partially studied, your CPA files a Form 3115 to catch up on the missed depreciation for the newly converted unit. This is a common and well-established strategy for house hackers building a rental portfolio.

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Disclosure This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Cost Seg Smart is not a CPA firm, tax advisory firm, or law firm. Our engineering-based cost segregation reports are designed to be CPA-ready — meaning they should be reviewed by your qualified tax professional before filing. Every property and tax situation is different. The examples and figures in this article are illustrative estimates based on typical reclassification rates and standard tax brackets. Actual results depend on your specific property characteristics, tax situation, and applicable law. Please consult your CPA or tax advisor before making any tax decisions based on the information in this article.

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Run Your Numbers Cost Segregation Calculator Free year-1 estimate by property type and price. 30 seconds, no signup. Understand the Risk Does Cost Seg Increase Audit Risk? What the IRS actually looks for and why engineering-based studies hold up. Understand the Cost Pricing and ROI Guide $495 vs $5,000+ — what drives the price and when the ROI pencils.