Denver's strong appreciation, high rental demand, and proximity to mountain recreation make it a top-tier market for SFR investors using cost segregation.
Estimates are for illustration only. Details
Denver's rental market is driven by a steady influx of transplants attracted to the outdoor lifestyle, tech job growth, and a vibrant downtown scene. The metro area — Lakewood, Aurora, Arvada, Thornton — offers SFR rentals in the $450K–$650K range that command $2,200–$3,200/month in long-term rent. For investors, the combination of strong appreciation (Denver median home prices have roughly doubled since 2015) and reliable tenant demand makes this a classic buy-and-hold market where cost segregation can significantly improve after-tax returns.
What makes Denver particularly well-suited for cost segregation is the age and quality of its investor-target housing stock. Many rentals purchased in the last decade were built between 2010 and 2023, which means builders and county assessors have detailed component-level cost data on file. That granularity directly improves the precision of a cost segregation study — the more specific the construction records, the more confidently each component gets classified into its correct MACRS recovery period. Older homes in RiNo, LoHi, and Capitol Hill that have been renovated also tend to perform well because renovations create fresh short-life assets (new flooring, cabinetry, appliances, lighting) that all qualify for accelerated depreciation.
Consider a $575K rental property in the Denver suburbs — say a 3-bedroom in Lakewood or Thornton built in 2016 with a finished basement, two-car garage, and standard landscaping. A cost segregation study typically reclassifies roughly $138K of the depreciable basis into shorter MACRS classes: about $97K in 5-year property (cabinetry, flooring, appliances, electrical dedicated to equipment, decorative fixtures) and $30K in 15-year property (driveway, landscaping, irrigation, fencing, exterior lighting). With 100% bonus depreciation, that entire $138K is deductible in year one — generating approximately $51K in federal tax savings at the 37% bracket.
The typical Denver rental investor owns 1–3 properties and works a W-2 job in tech, healthcare, or finance. Many are under-utilizing their depreciation because they've never heard of cost segregation or assumed it was only for large commercial properties. For investors who qualify as Real Estate Professionals (750+ hours/year in real estate activities), cost segregation unlocks the ability to deduct accelerated depreciation against their salary income — not just rental income. Even for passive investors, the accelerated deductions shelter rental cash flow from federal taxes and create loss carryforwards that offset gains when you eventually sell or 1031 exchange.
Colorado levies a flat 4.4% state income tax, which means Denver investors capture a meaningful state-level benefit on top of the federal savings. On a $575K rental with $138K in accelerated depreciation, that's roughly $6,000 in additional state tax savings in year one. Colorado conforms to federal bonus depreciation rules, so there are no state-level complications for your CPA — the same Form 4562 and Form 3115 (if filing a lookback study) apply at both levels.
Illustrative estimate. Final allocations vary based on property facts and report findings.
Component-by-component breakdown, MACRS schedules, and Form 3115 filing instructions. This is the actual deliverable — see exactly what your CPA receives.
View Denver Sample Report →No. Cost segregation is explicitly supported by IRS guidelines (Rev. Proc. 87-56) and the IRS Audit Techniques Guide for Cost Segregation. Tens of thousands of studies are filed every year. Our reports are designed to withstand scrutiny — that's why they run 40+ pages with component-level documentation.
Cost segregation is standard practice, not a loophole. The IRS has published formal guidance on how to do it correctly. Every Big 4 accounting firm offers it. We follow the same engineering-based methodology — just faster and at a fraction of the cost.
You'll owe depreciation recapture at 25% on the accelerated portion when you sell. But if you 1031 exchange into another property, recapture is deferred indefinitely. For most investors, the upfront tax savings far outweigh the eventual recapture — especially when you factor in the time value of money.
Most CPAs know about cost segregation but don't proactively recommend it because they don't do the engineering analysis in-house. That's what we provide. Your CPA files the results — we email them a CPA-ready package with everything they need, and we answer any questions they have directly.
Denver rental properties contain a high concentration of reclassifiable building components that most investors depreciate too slowly. Suburban SFRs in Lakewood, Aurora, and Thornton built after 2010 typically include finished basements, detached garages, landscaped yards, concrete driveways, and quality interior finishes — all of which qualify for 5-year or 15-year MACRS recovery instead of the default 27.5 years.
Renovated properties in neighborhoods like RiNo and LoHi perform especially well because recent upgrades create fresh short-life assets: new flooring, cabinetry, countertops, light fixtures, and appliances. These components are often the most expensive part of a renovation but get lumped into 27.5-year depreciation by default. A cost segregation study pulls them into their correct accelerated classes.
With 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored, every dollar reclassified is deductible in full in year one. Colorado's flat 4.4% state income tax adds a meaningful state-level benefit on top of the federal savings, and Colorado conforms to federal bonus depreciation rules — no state-level adjustments needed.
If your property is a passive investment managed entirely by a third party, the accelerated depreciation may only offset passive income. If your property has minimal furnishings or you plan to sell within 1-2 years, the benefit may be reduced. Actual results vary based on property age, condition, renovations, and local construction costs.
This Airbnb investor ordered a cost segregation study and used the accelerated depreciation on their next tax return. Here's what happened.
| Price | Accelerated | Tax Savings | Study Cost | ROI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $300K | $72,000 | $26,640 | $795 | 34x |
| $500K | $120,000 | $44,400 | $795 | 56x |
| $750K | $180,000 | $66,600 | $795 | 84x |
| $1M | $240,000 | $88,800 | $1,195 | 74x |
| $400K | $96,000 | $35,520 | $795 | 45x |
| $600K | $144,000 | $53,280 | $795 | 67x |
| $1.5M | $360,000 | $133,200 | $1,195 | 111x |
| $450K | $108,000 | $39,960 | $795 | 50x |
| $700K | $168,000 | $62,160 | $795 | 78x |
| $800K | $192,000 | $71,040 | $795 | 89x |
A cost segregation study is an engineering-based analysis that reclassifies components of your property into shorter IRS depreciation categories (5, 7, and 15 years) instead of the default 27.5 or 39 years. This accelerates your depreciation deductions, reducing your tax bill in the early years of ownership.
Short-term rentals are typically furnished with furniture, appliances, electronics, linens, kitchenware, and décor — all of which qualify as 5-year personal property under MACRS. This FF&E (furniture, fixtures, and equipment) often represents 15-20% of the property's depreciable basis, significantly increasing the accelerated depreciation amount compared to unfurnished long-term rentals.
For long-term rentals, depreciation deductions are generally passive and can only offset passive income. However, there are two key exceptions: (1) if your AGI is under $150K, you can deduct up to $25K in passive losses against ordinary income, and (2) if you qualify as a Real Estate Professional (750+ hours/year in real estate), all rental income becomes non-passive. STR owners who materially participate can deduct against W-2 income regardless.
Our studies are delivered in 3-5 business days. You provide the property address, purchase price, and closing date — we handle everything else using assessor records, satellite imagery, and construction cost databases. No site visit or tenant disruption required.
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