The most powerful depreciation strategy in real estate — and the one California changes more than any other state. Here’s the whole picture, from an Enrolled Agent who runs the studies.
By Foad Nabi, EA · Enrolled Agent · California · June 2026
Cost segregation is the most powerful depreciation strategy available to real estate owners — and one of the most misunderstood, especially in California. This page is the map. Below is a quick first-pass estimator, the full set of plain-English guides, and a straight answer on whether it’s worth it for your property. I’m Foad Nabi, an Enrolled Agent licensed by the IRS; I run cost segregation studies for California property owners alongside a licensed engineer, and I handle the part most people get wrong — the tax return that has to be correct federally and in California.
Read in any order — but if you’re new to this, start at the top left and work across.
Most cost segregation content online is written for the federal rules, where 100% bonus depreciation now lets you deduct the reclassified property almost entirely in year one. California never adopted bonus depreciation and caps the related expensing at $25,000 — so a study run on the federal numbers produces a correct federal return and an overstated California one. The federal benefit alone usually justifies a study many times over; the point is that your California return needs its own depreciation schedule, and the full decision has to be modeled across both. That’s the gap this site exists to close.
A quality study is engineering-based: a specialist inspects the property (or detailed records and plans), identifies and values every component that qualifies for a shorter recovery period, and documents it to a standard that holds up under IRS examination. The output is a report your preparer uses to restate the depreciation — including, for properties you’ve owned for years, a one-time catch-up of all the depreciation you should have been taking, claimed via an automatic accounting method change on Form 3115 with no amended returns. The study is the engineering; the return is the tax work; you want both done right and done together.
Foad is a federally licensed Enrolled Agent who writes about tax and bookkeeping for small businesses.