California is one of the highest-impact states for cost segregation—and one of the most misunderstood. Federal rules allow large first-year deductions, but California does not follow the same depreciation schedule.
See Your California Tax Savings →
California is one of the most valuable states for cost segregation—and one of the most misunderstood. The high property values generate some of the largest accelerated depreciation deductions in the country: a $1M rental property routinely produces $200K+ in reclassified assets at the federal level. But the state doesn't follow the same rules, which changes the math in ways most investors don't anticipate.
does cost segregation increase audit risk →
However, California is different from most states. While federal tax law allows 100% bonus depreciation under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, California does not conform to those rules. In practice, investors receive a large federal tax benefit immediately, while the California portion of the deduction is spread out over the standard MACRS recovery periods.
For most investors—especially those in the 37% federal bracket—this timing difference is still highly favorable. But understanding how the federal and state returns interact is essential before ordering a study.
A $1.2M Hollywood Hills Airbnb generated ~$288,000 in accelerated deductions—roughly $106,000 in estimated federal tax savings.
Typical California savings: $50,000–$110,000
At the federal level, cost segregation reclassifies portions of a property into 5, 7, and 15-year assets. With 100% bonus depreciation, those components can be deducted entirely in the first year.
California does not follow federal bonus depreciation rules. Instead, the state requires standard MACRS depreciation schedules. This creates a timing mismatch: you may see a significant federal tax benefit in Year 1, while your California tax benefit is realized gradually over 5–15 years.
For most investors with high federal tax exposure, the federal acceleration alone justifies the study. But the split matters—your CPA needs to maintain separate federal and state depreciation schedules, which most California CPAs already do.
Federal benefit is immediate. California benefit is real but distributed over time due to state non-conformity with bonus depreciation.
Most investors run a quick estimate before ordering. See your California numbers here.
Federal and state returns will differ. You get the full federal bonus deduction in Year 1, but the state deduction follows standard MACRS schedules. This is the single most important thing to understand about cost seg in California.
A $1M property in LA produces ~$240K in accelerated depreciation at the federal level. Even a $500K Joshua Tree cabin generates ~$120K. The raw numbers are larger than in most other states simply because of property values.
For high-income California W-2 earners, the ability to treat STR losses as non-passive (via material participation) is the single biggest factor in whether cost segregation pays off. Without it, losses are limited to passive income only.
Your CPA needs to maintain federal and California depreciation schedules independently. Most California tax professionals already do this, but confirm before filing.
This Airbnb investor ordered a cost segregation study and used the deductions on their next tax return.
High property values mean larger depreciation bases, translating into significant federal deductions. Hollywood Hills, Venice, and Silver Lake STRs carry heavy furnishing packages—designer furniture, smart home systems, pool areas—all of which fall into 5-year MACRS classes. The state-level benefit is more gradual due to California's non-conformity, but the federal impact alone frequently exceeds $80K in Year 1.
See Los Angeles breakdown →
Pacific Beach, Mission Beach, and North Park drive year-round STR demand supported by military relocations and tourism. San Diego properties tend to have extensive outdoor improvements—patios, landscaping, fencing—that fall into the 15-year MACRS class, adding to the reclassified amount beyond interior FF&E. Entry points are lower than LA, making the study-cost-to-savings ratio especially strong.
See San Diego breakdown →The dominant use case. High property values and heavy furnishing create the largest dollar-amount deductions of any state. Material participation status is the key gating factor.
California's multifamily market is massive. Older rent-controlled buildings often have significant deferred maintenance and separable components that create strong reclassification opportunities.
Office, retail, and mixed-use properties depreciate over 39 years by default. Tenant improvements, specialized HVAC, and parking structures all reclassify into shorter classes.
Interior-only depreciation limits the total, but at California price points ($500K-$1M+ for a condo), the interior components still produce meaningful acceleration.
Have one of these property types? See what your California property would save.
Opportunities vary by city. Select a market below to see estimated savings and a detailed MACRS breakdown.
Run your numbers in under 30 seconds. 100% bonus depreciation is available now under federal law.
See Your California Tax Savings →Starting at $495. Delivered in 3-5 business days. Money-back guarantee.