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36 tagged with "Cost Segregation"

Engineering-based studies that reclassify building components into shorter MACRS lives to accelerate depreciation deductions

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Car Wash Bookkeeping: ASC 606 Deferred Revenue, Cost per Car, and 15-Year MACRS Tunnel Depreciation
·mike

Car Wash Bookkeeping: ASC 606 Deferred Revenue, Cost per Car, and 15-Year MACRS Tunnel Depreciation

How express car washes should recognize unlimited membership revenue ratably under ASC 606, allocate variable cost per car across water, electricity, and chemicals (~$1.50/car target), and depreciate tunnel equipment under 15-year MACRS with cost segregation and bonus depreciation.

bookkeeping
revenue-recognition
accrual-accounting
depreciation
+4
The Self-Rental Rule: Why Your Building Rents Are Nonpassive but Your Losses Stay Passive
·mike

The Self-Rental Rule: Why Your Building Rents Are Nonpassive but Your Losses Stay Passive

Reg. 1.469-2(f)(6) recharacterizes net rental income from property you rent to your own active business as nonpassive while leaving rental losses passive. This guide explains the asymmetry, walks through a dentist example with a $200,000 cost segregation deduction, and shows how the Reg. 1.469-4 grouping election can collapse the rule.

tax-planning
tax-compliance
real-estate
cost-segregation
+4
Qualified Improvement Property Under Section 168(e)(6): How Restaurant, Retail, and Office Build-Outs Unlock 15-Year Recovery and 100% Bonus Depreciation
·mike

Qualified Improvement Property Under Section 168(e)(6): How Restaurant, Retail, and Office Build-Outs Unlock 15-Year Recovery and 100% Bonus Depreciation

Qualified Improvement Property (QIP) under Section 168(e)(6) lets nonresidential interior build-outs use a 15-year recovery period and qualify for 100% bonus depreciation after the OBBBA. Covers the statutory test, three exclusions, TCJA-to-OBBBA history, a worked $540,000 restaurant example, and Form 3115 catch-up deductions.

depreciation
bonus-depreciation
cost-segregation
section-179
+4
Section 469 Passive Activity Loss Rules: How Real Estate Investors Unlock Trapped Losses
·mike

Section 469 Passive Activity Loss Rules: How Real Estate Investors Unlock Trapped Losses

A practical guide to Section 469 for real estate investors and side-business owners — the seven material participation tests, the $25,000 active-rental allowance, the real estate professional carve-out, the short-term rental angle, and the disposition rules that release suspended losses.

tax
tax-planning
real-estate
tax-deductions
+3
Bookkeeping for Short-Term Rental Hosts: Schedule E vs. Schedule C, the 7-Day Average Stay Rule, and Material Participation
·mike

Bookkeeping for Short-Term Rental Hosts: Schedule E vs. Schedule C, the 7-Day Average Stay Rule, and Material Participation

How Airbnb and Vrbo hosts classify income on Schedule E vs. Schedule C, calculate the 7-day average stay, and document material participation to unlock non-passive losses against W-2 wages.

airbnb
real-estate
bookkeeping
tax-planning
+4
Section 1245 vs. Section 1250: How Depreciation Recapture Erodes Your Bonus Depreciation Benefits
·mike

Section 1245 vs. Section 1250: How Depreciation Recapture Erodes Your Bonus Depreciation Benefits

When you sell depreciated business property, Section 1245 recaptures prior depreciation as ordinary income (up to 37%), while Section 1250 caps the recapture on real estate at 25% — turning a 100% bonus depreciation deduction into a large tax bill at exit unless you plan with cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, and a clean fixed-asset register.

depreciation
bonus-depreciation
cost-segregation
real-estate
+3
Real Estate Professional Status: How High Earners Use Section 469(c)(7) to Turn Rental Losses Into Tax Savings
·mike

Real Estate Professional Status: How High Earners Use Section 469(c)(7) to Turn Rental Losses Into Tax Savings

A practical guide to Section 469(c)(7) Real Estate Professional Status — the 750-hour and more-than-half tests, the spousal rule, material participation and the grouping election, common audit failures, and how 100% bonus depreciation in 2026 makes REPS worth the documentation cost.

real-estate
tax-planning
tax-deductions
bonus-depreciation
+4
Cost Segregation Studies: Reclassifying Building Components Into 5, 7, and 15-Year Lives for Front-Loaded Tax Savings
·mike

Cost Segregation Studies: Reclassifying Building Components Into 5, 7, and 15-Year Lives for Front-Loaded Tax Savings

A cost segregation study uses engineering-based analysis to move 20–45% of a building's basis from 27.5- or 39-year straight-line into 5, 7, and 15-year MACRS classes. Combined with the 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act for property placed in service after January 19, 2025, real estate investors can convert a routine $91,000 first-year deduction into roughly $766,000 — provided they clear IRC §469 passive activity loss limits via real estate professional status, the short-term rental rule, or passive income offsets.

cost-segregation
bonus-depreciation
depreciation
real-estate
+4
The Short-Term Rental Tax Loophole: Offsetting W-2 Income Without Real Estate Professional Status
·mike

The Short-Term Rental Tax Loophole: Offsetting W-2 Income Without Real Estate Professional Status

How short-term rentals sit outside the Section 469 passive loss rules, what the seven-day average and material participation tests actually require, and how a six-figure W-2 earner can use cost segregation and 100% bonus depreciation to legally offset wage income.

tax
real-estate
tax-planning
tax-deductions
+5
Form 3115 Demystified: How to Change Your Accounting Method and Unlock Tax Savings
·mike

Form 3115 Demystified: How to Change Your Accounting Method and Unlock Tax Savings

Form 3115 lets U.S. taxpayers change accounting methods and use a Section 481(a) adjustment to recover missed deductions or correct multi-year errors on a single current-year return, without amending prior years.

tax-compliance
tax-planning
depreciation
cost-segregation
+4
Section 1031 Like-Kind Exchange: A Real Estate Investor's Guide to Indefinite Tax Deferral
·mike

Section 1031 Like-Kind Exchange: A Real Estate Investor's Guide to Indefinite Tax Deferral

Section 1031 lets real estate investors defer capital gains and depreciation recapture by swapping investment properties, but only when the 45-day identification window, 180-day closing deadline, qualified intermediary rules, and post-TCJA like-kind requirements are followed exactly.

real-estate
tax-planning
capital-gains
depreciation
+3
Cost Segregation Studies: How Real Estate Investors Turn a Building Into Five-Figure Tax Savings
·mike

Cost Segregation Studies: How Real Estate Investors Turn a Building Into Five-Figure Tax Savings

A cost segregation study reclassifies a building's components into shorter MACRS lives, unlocking the 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of July 2025. On a $1M residential rental, that swings first-year tax savings from roughly $10,700 to roughly $90,600—provided the investor clears IRC §469 passive activity loss limits.

real-estate
depreciation
tax-planning
tax-deductions
+4
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