Kansas offers one of the cleaner cost-segregation setups in the Midwest because the state conforms to federal bonus depreciation: the acceleration generally flows on both the federal and Kansas returns, with no add-back to track. The state’s strongest rental markets are the Kansas-side Kansas City suburbs (Overland Park, Olathe, Lenexa), where higher-value suburban inventory meets steady demand, and Wichita, the state’s deepest affordable single-family and small-multifamily base. Lawrence (University of Kansas) and Manhattan (Kansas State) add furnished student and faculty housing. See Your Kansas Tax Savings →
- IRS Audit Techniques Guide methodology
- 40+ page CPA-ready report
- Delivered in about an hour for simple residential
- Audit support included, and if the IRS questions methodology we respond directly at no extra charge
- Every report passes our 16-check internal technical review and QC before delivery
At the federal level, components reclassified into 5-, 7-, and 15-year MACRS qualify for 100% bonus depreciation under §168(k), available now for property placed in service in 2026. Kansas conforms to the current Internal Revenue Code, so the same acceleration generally applies on the Kansas return. Verify the current Kansas treatment with your CPA before filing, since state conformity can change with future legislation.
does cost segregation increase audit risk →
How Cost Segregation Works in Kansas
Cost segregation reclassifies portions of a property’s depreciable basis out of the slow 27.5-year (residential) or 39-year (commercial) schedule and into 5-year (FF&E, appliances, carpet, fixtures), 7-year, and 15-year (land improvements, paving, landscaping) MACRS classes. Those shorter-life components qualify for federal bonus depreciation in the year placed in service.
At the federal level, every $100K reclassified produces about $37K of Year-1 federal tax savings at the 37% bracket. Because Kansas conforms to §168(k), the accelerated deduction generally carries to the Kansas return as well, so the state side adds benefit rather than clawing it back.
Real Example, $340K Overland Park rental:
- $340,000 purchase price
- $272,000 depreciable basis (excluding land)
- $54,000 accelerated depreciation (reclassified to 5/7/15-year MACRS)
- About $20,000 estimated federal tax savings (37% bracket)
- Kansas state treatment: conforms (additional state-side benefit, confirm with your CPA)
Typical Kansas Year-1 federal savings: $14,000 to $50,000 depending on basis and property type.
What Investors in Kansas Should Know
The Johnson County suburbs are the high-value play. Overland Park, Olathe, Lenexa, and Leawood carry newer, finish-rich SFR and small multifamily in the $300K to $600K range, where larger absolute basis means larger absolute first-year deductions.
Wichita is the affordable cash-flow base. Deep SFR and small-multifamily inventory commonly trades in the $150K to $350K range with strong rent-to-price ratios. Cost segregation pencils even at modest basis.
University markets are FF&E-rich. Lawrence (KU) and Manhattan (K-State) support furnished student and faculty rentals that turn over on the academic calendar. Furniture, appliances, and electronics reclassify into 5-year MACRS, the highest-value component class.
Conformity keeps the math simple. Because Kansas follows the federal code, there is no separate state add-back schedule to maintain, which makes Kansas attractive for multi-property investors who want clean books.
Form 3115 lookback applies. Properties acquired in 2023 or earlier without a study can claim a §481(a) catch-up of all missed depreciation in the current return.
Multi-Property Investors and Form 3115 Lookback
A common Kansas portfolio is an Overland Park suburban SFR, a Wichita cash-flow rental, and a Lawrence or Manhattan furnished student rental. Pre-2023 acquisitions without a study qualify for §481(a) lookback in a single filing. Multi-property study bundles run 5% to 15% off per property depending on count. See bundle pricing →
Key Markets in Kansas
Overland Park and Johnson County
The highest-value rental submarket in the state: Overland Park, Olathe, Lenexa, and Leawood combine newer construction, strong schools, and steady Kansas City metro demand. Median rental basis runs $320K to $600K, and finish-rich suburban builds reclassify favorably. Estimate yours →
Wichita
The state’s deepest affordable market. SFR and small multifamily across the metro commonly run $150K to $350K with strong rent ratios that make cost segregation pencil even at modest basis. Estimate yours →
Property Types That Benefit Most in Kansas
Single-family rentals, Overland Park, Wichita, Topeka. The dominant asset class; affordable to mid basis with strong rent ratios.
Mid-term and short-term rentals, Lawrence, Manhattan, downtown Wichita. Furnished student, faculty, and traveling-professional rentals with higher FF&E density.
Multifamily, Wichita, Kansas City (KS), Topeka. Small-multifamily and value-add inventory benefits from unit-count multiplication on shared building systems.
Have one of these property types? See what your Kansas property would save.
When Cost Segregation Typically Makes Sense in Kansas
It typically makes sense when:
- Purchase price above ~$180K (cost segregation pencils well even at modest Midwest basis)
- The property is furnished or you plan to furnish it for student or mid-term use
- You materially participate in a rental or qualify as a real estate professional
- You have passive income or W-2 income you can offset
- You hold the property 3+ years (federal recapture at 25% still applies at sale)
It may not make sense if:
- Property is under ~$130K with minimal improvements
- You’re a passive investor with no other passive income (deductions carry forward unused)
- You plan to sell within 12 to 18 months
Cost Segregation by Market in Kansas
Opportunities vary by market. Run the calculator for any Kansas property to see an estimated MACRS breakdown.
Overland Park and Johnson County
Median rental: $420,000 · about $18,000 to $50,000 Year-1 federal savings · Estimate yours →
Wichita
Median rental: $240,000 · about $11,000 to $32,000 Year-1 federal savings · Estimate yours →
Kansas Cost Segregation Guides
- Short-Term Rental Cost Segregation
- Single-Family Rental Cost Segregation
- Multifamily Cost Segregation
- Cost Segregation Calculator
- Bonus Depreciation Hub
- See a sample cost segregation report
- Our methodology and 16-check QC process
- Short-term rental material participation test
See Your Estimated Kansas Savings
Run your numbers in under 30 seconds. 100% bonus depreciation is available now under federal law, and Kansas conforms. Confirm state-side treatment with your CPA. See Your Kansas Tax Savings →
Starting at $495 for residential studies under $300K basis. Delivered in about an hour for simple residential SFR / STR; 3-5 business days for properties over $3M or commercial. Money-back guarantee.
For properties over $10M basis (large multifamily, hospitality, institutional commercial): same-day preliminary, about 2 weeks post-close final. By proposal.
How should Kansas investors choose a cost segregation provider?
For a Kansas investor buying a property in the $340,000 range, the choice of study provider is the single biggest controllable variable in the ROI. The methodology is fixed by IRS Audit Techniques Guide rules (industry-standard construction cost data, MACRS classification, engineering-based component reclassification) — what varies is delivery cost and turnaround time.
Traditional engineering studies often run several thousand dollars and can take several weeks, because they include on-site inspections, sales discovery calls, and scheduling overhead. The IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide does not require a physical site visit; it requires engineering-based classification with industry-calibrated cost derivation and component-level documentation.
Modern automated providers (such as Cost Seg Smart) deliver the same IRS ATG–aligned study for $495–$1,595 in under one hour, using satellite imagery, county assessor data, and the same industry-standard construction cost databases. For a Kansas investor at the metro's combined bracket, that cost delta typically exceeds the study cost itself by several times over. The CPA-Ready Guarantee (full refund if the report can't be used by your CPA) plus the 60-day money-back policy makes the decision essentially risk-free on the report itself.
The automated path is best-fit for Kansas investors who: own residential STR property valued under $2M, are comfortable uploading closing docs + property photos online (no in-person visit required), and want the report in time to file the current year's return rather than the next one.
| Property value | Cost Seg Smart | Traditional firm |
|---|---|---|
| <$300K | $495 | Traditional engineering firms typically charge several thousand dollars per study, with a 4–8 week turnaround and an on-site visit. |
| $300K–$700K | $895 | |
| $700K–$1M | $995 | |
| $1M–$1.5M | $1,295 | |
| $1.5M–$2M | $1,595 | |
| $2M–$3M | $1,995 | |
| Commercial (under $1M) | $1,995 |
All Cost Seg Smart studies include the CPA-Ready Guarantee (full refund if your CPA can't use the report) plus a 60-day money-back policy. Reports are delivered in under one hour with no on-site visit required.