Southern charm, a booming film industry, and Historic District tourism make Savannah a high-yield STR market where cost segregation amplifies already strong returns.
Estimates are for illustration only. Details
Savannah offers something Charleston can’t: premium STR returns at a lower entry price. A restored row house in the Historic District runs $400K–$600K — roughly 30% less than comparable Charleston properties — while pulling $2,800–$5,000 per month in peak-season revenue. Tybee Island beach bungalows and Starland District craftsmans round out the investor playbook. The city’s film industry brings production crews who book entire homes for weeks at a time.
Savannah’s Historic District properties are dense with components that reclassify under cost segregation. Original heart pine flooring, wrought iron fencing, courtyard hardscaping with brick pavers, period-appropriate light fixtures, and ornamental plasterwork all move into shorter recovery classes. Tybee Island properties add coastal elements — elevated foundations, outdoor showers, salt-resistant fixtures — that further boost accelerated depreciation.
A Starland District craftsman purchased for $480K and converted to an STR shows the math clearly. The study identifies roughly $16K in restored heart pine flooring, $12K in wrought iron fencing and courtyard hardscape, $9K in period light fixtures and decorative hardware, $8K in outdoor entertaining areas with brick pavers, and $13K in furnishings and decor. Over $58K reclassified into accelerated recovery classes.
Savannah attracts a specific investor profile: someone who considered Charleston but wanted better yield math. They’re typically earning $200K–$400K in W-2 income, buying their first or second STR, and looking for a property that cash-flows after debt service while also delivering tax benefits. Lower entry prices mean cost segregation deductions represent a larger percentage of the purchase.
Georgia’s flat 5.39% income tax rate applies to rental income and STR profits. Cost segregation deductions reduce both federal and Georgia taxable income simultaneously. For an investor in the 32% federal bracket, the combined marginal rate exceeds 37% — making every dollar of accelerated depreciation worth roughly $0.37 in immediate tax savings.
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 Savannah 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.
Short-term rentals contain a higher concentration of depreciable personal property than almost any other residential property type. Furniture, appliances, linens, kitchenware, electronics, decorative fixtures, and specialty items like hot tubs or game room equipment all qualify as 5-year property under the IRS MACRS classification system. This furniture, fixtures, and equipment (FF&E) component typically represents 15-20% of the depreciable basis.
Beyond interior components, site improvements add additional reclassification value. Driveways, walkways, patios, outdoor lighting, fencing, landscaping, and irrigation systems fall into the 15-year MACRS class rather than the default 27.5-year residential schedule. For STR properties with pools, outdoor kitchens, or fire pits, these components can represent a meaningful share of the total reclassified amount.
With 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (signed July 2025), every dollar reclassified into 5-year, 7-year, or 15-year MACRS classes is deductible in full in the first year. For STR owners who materially participate in their rental operation, these accelerated deductions can offset W-2 and business income — not just passive rental income.
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 |
| Property Type | Accelerated | Tax Savings | Study Cost | ROI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Airbnb / Short-Term Rental | $120,000 | $44,400 | $795 | 56x |
| Rental Property | $80,000 | $29,600 | $795 | 37x |
| Duplex | $88,000 | $32,560 | $995 | 33x |
| Condo | $68,000 | $25,160 | $795 | 32x |
| Triplex | $88,000 | $32,560 | $995 | 33x |
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.
Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (signed July 2025), 100% bonus depreciation is permanently restored for 2025 and beyond. This means every dollar of depreciation reclassified into 5-year, 7-year, or 15-year MACRS classes through cost segregation can be deducted in full in the first year you place the property in service.
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.
Get a professional, IRS-defensible cost segregation study delivered in 3-5 business days. Starting at $495.
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