Tax Strategy

Cost Segregation for New Construction: Why You Should Do It Before Move-In

January 8, 2026 9 min read Cost Seg Smart Team

New construction is the ideal time for a cost segregation study. Every component value is documented from the build, removing the main source of estimation error — guessing original vs. renovated components on older properties. Combined with 100% bonus depreciation (permanently restored under OBBBA in 2025), Year 1 tax savings on new construction often run 40–50% of total building cost on high-FF&E properties like short-term rentals.

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New construction is the single best time to do a cost segregation study. Everything is fresh. Every component value is known. There is no guesswork about what was renovated versus what was original. And with 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored, the Year 1 tax savings are as large as they have ever been.

Yet most builders and investors do not think about cost segregation until years after the property is placed in service. That is like buying a lottery ticket and waiting three years to check the numbers. The money is already there — you just have not claimed it.

Why New Construction Is Ideal for Cost Seg

Cost segregation reclassifies building components from the default 27.5-year (residential) or 39-year (commercial) depreciation schedule into shorter MACRS class assignments — 5-year, 7-year, and 15-year property. With 100% bonus depreciation, those reclassified components are deducted entirely in Year 1.

New construction makes this process cleaner and more defensible for three reasons:

home remodel

100% Bonus Depreciation Is Back — Permanently

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed in July 2025, permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation. This is a big deal.

Here is what it means in plain English: any building component classified as 5-year, 7-year, or 15-year property under MACRS can be written off 100% in the year the property is placed in service. Not spread over 5 or 15 years. All of it. Year 1.

During 2023-2024, bonus depreciation had phased down to 80% and 60%. A lot of investors sat on the sidelines waiting for it to come back. It is back. And it is permanent this time.

What this means for new construction: If you build or buy a new construction rental property and run a cost seg study in the year you place it in service, every dollar of reclassified property — flooring, cabinetry, landscaping, paving, specialty electrical — is deducted in full in Year 1. No phase-down. No spreading it out.

What Gets Reclassified in New Construction

People assume cost segregation only applies to fancy fixtures and specialty items. Wrong. A huge portion of any new build qualifies for reclassification. Here is what typically gets moved to shorter depreciation lives:

5-Year Property (Personal Property)

15-Year Property (Land Improvements)

For a typical new construction residential rental, 20-30% of the depreciable basis qualifies for reclassification. Furnished STRs can hit 30-35%.

The Numbers: $800K New Construction Example

Let us walk through a real scenario.

Item Amount
Purchase / construction cost $800,000
Land allocation (20%) $160,000
Depreciable basis $640,000
Standard depreciation (Year 1, 27.5yr) $23,273
Cost seg reclassification (28%) $179,200
Year 1 deduction with cost seg + bonus $195,927
Additional Year 1 deduction vs. standard $172,654
Tax savings at 36% rate $62,155
Cost seg study cost $795
ROI on the study 78x

Read that again. $795 for the study. $62,155 in Year 1 tax savings. That is a 78x return. On new construction, the numbers are almost absurd.

modern kitchen white counters

The Timing Advantage

This is where most people mess up. You need to run the cost segregation study in the year you place the property in service. That means the year the first tenant moves in (or the year you list it for rent and it is available for use).

If you wait:

The best time to do a cost seg study on new construction is the year the property is placed in service. The second best time is right now.

Pro tip: If your new construction finishes in December, make sure it is placed in service (available for rent) before December 31. That makes the full Year 1 bonus depreciation deduction available on that year's tax return. Even one day matters.

New Construction vs. Existing Property Cost Seg

Factor New Construction Existing Property
Component documentation Excellent (invoices, draws) Good (assessment data, estimation)
Renovation ambiguity None Possible (original vs. added)
Typical reclassification rate 22-35% 15-28%
Prior depreciation to account for None Yes (lookback calc needed)
IRS defensibility Very strong Strong
Cost seg study worth it? Absolutely Almost always

Spec Homes and Turnkey Builds

You do not have to be the builder to benefit. If you buy a new construction property from a developer, builder, or turnkey provider, cost segregation works exactly the same way. The "new" part refers to the property being newly constructed — not that you personally built it.

In fact, turnkey new construction rentals are one of the best use cases for cost seg. You buy the property, it is already rent-ready (or already rented), and you run the cost seg study immediately. Maximum deduction, minimum hassle.

Do It Before the First Tenant Moves In

If you are building or buying new construction in 2026, here is your playbook:

  1. Close on the property (or receive certificate of occupancy)
  2. Order your cost segregation study from Cost Seg Smart — $795, report delivered in under an hour
  3. Give the report to your CPA
  4. File your tax return with the accelerated depreciation
  5. Collect your five-figure tax savings

That is it. Five steps. The study takes less time than your closing appointment.

Bottom line: New construction is the best possible scenario for cost segregation. Clean records, maximum basis, no lookback complications. With 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored and studies starting at $495, there is zero reason not to do this. Cost Seg Smart is the modern cost segregation company — IRS-aligned reports delivered in under an hour. Everyone building or buying new construction should be doing this.

You just spent $800K building a rental property. You will spend $795 on the cost seg study and save $62,000+ in taxes in Year 1. Make it make sense to not do this. You cannot.

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I order a cost segregation study for new construction?

Order the study in the year the property is placed in service -- meaning the year it is available for rent or occupancy. For new construction, this is typically the year the certificate of occupancy is issued. Ordering the study early in the tax year gives your CPA time to incorporate the reclassified depreciation schedules into your return. With 100% bonus depreciation, all reclassified 5-year, 7-year, and 15-year components are deductible in full in Year 1. Waiting even one year means you lose the time value of those deductions.

Is new construction better for cost segregation than buying an existing property?

New construction is the ideal scenario for cost segregation for several reasons. The depreciable basis is typically higher (you paid full construction cost, not a discounted market price). Detailed contractor invoices and architectural specs may be available to support component classification. There is no prior depreciation history to reconcile. And the placed-in-service date is clear. Combined with 100% bonus depreciation, new construction allows you to deduct 20-35% of the build cost in Year 1 through reclassified components.

Do I need construction invoices for the cost segregation study?

No. While detailed construction records can support the study, they are not required. Cost Seg Smart uses RSMeans national construction cost databases and engineering-based allocation methodologies that work with or without detailed invoices. The study classifies components based on standard construction cost data for your property type, size, and location. If you do have contractor invoices, they can enhance the documentation but are not a prerequisite for a compliant study.

How much does a cost segregation study cost for new construction?

Cost Seg Smart delivers engineering-based cost segregation studies starting at $495 for residential new construction and $995 for commercial, with reports in under one hour. Traditional firms charge $5,000-$15,000 and take 4-8 weeks. On an $800K new construction property, the study typically identifies $120,000-$160,000 in reclassified components, generating $44,000-$59,000 in Year 1 tax savings at a 37% marginal rate. The ROI is typically 50-100x the cost of the study. Every report includes a CPA-Ready Guarantee.

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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.

Next Steps

Where to go from here

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.