
Real Numbers: What a $200K–$1M Property Can Often Do
Real Numbers: What a $200K–$1M Property Can Often Do (And What Changes the Result)

Owners don’t need theory — they need a ballpark that feels real.
If you’ve been researching cost segregation, you’ve probably seen two extremes:
“Save hundreds of thousands instantly.”
“It’s not worth it unless you own skyscrapers.”
Neither is very helpful.
What most owners actually want is simple:
“If my property is worth between $200K and $1M, what could this realistically do for me?”
Not hype.
Not guarantees.
Realistic ranges.
Let’s walk through them — and explain what changes the outcome.
First: Why Every Answer Is a Range (Not a Promise)
Cost segregation results depend on variables.
Small differences in property history, construction, and ownership profile can create big swings in outcomes.
That’s why professionals talk in ranges first.
Not headlines.
Before we look at scenarios, understand this:
Two $500K properties can produce completely different tax results.
And both can be “correct.”
The Three Main Drivers of Cost Seg Savings
Nearly every result comes down to three inputs.
1. Depreciable Basis
This is the portion of your property that can be depreciated.
It starts with:
Purchase price or construction cost
Plus capital improvements
Minus land value
Higher basis = more assets to reclassify.
No basis, no leverage.
2. Improvements and Renovations
Renovation dollars often outperform original purchase dollars.
Why?
Because new components frequently qualify for faster write-offs.
Two owners may both buy at $400K.
One invests $150K in upgrades.
The other doesn’t.
Their results won’t be close.
3. Income That Can Actually Use the Deductions
Depreciation only matters if you have taxable income to offset.
Your income profile determines:
Whether losses are usable now
Or carried forward
Or limited
Strong planning aligns deductions with high-income years.
Scenario 1: Multifamily Property ($300K–$700K Range)
Profile:
Small apartment building
Moderate interior finishes
Average systems
Light upgrades
Typical Range (No Major Renovations)
Accelerated depreciation: $40K–$120K
Tax savings depend on bracket, but this is often meaningful.
With Renovations ($75K+ CapEx)
Accelerated depreciation: $90K–$220K+
Renovations frequently double impact.
Scenario 2: Small Commercial / Office / Retail ($250K–$800K)
Profile:
Office suite
Medical/retail unit
Professional space
Tenant improvements
Typical Range (Minimal Improvements)
Accelerated depreciation: $35K–$100K
With Interior Buildouts
Accelerated depreciation: $80K–$200K+
Specialized interiors drive reclassification.
Scenario 3: Mixed-Use Property ($400K–$1M)
Profile:
Retail + apartments
Office + residential
Storefront with rentals
Mixed-use properties vary widely.
They contain multiple asset profiles under one roof.
Typical Range
Accelerated depreciation: $70K–$250K+
Proper allocation between uses is critical here.
Errors cost money.
Scenario 4: Older Property vs Newer Property
Age matters.
But not always how people expect.
Older Property (Pre-2000s)
Pros:
Often more reclassifiable components
Frequent renovations
Multiple improvement phases
Typical range: $60K–$200K+
Newer Property (Recent Construction)
Pros:
Better documentation
Known cost breakdowns
Modern systems
Typical range: $40K–$150K+
Newer isn’t automatically better.
History matters more than age.
With vs Without Renovations: The Biggest Divider
Let’s isolate this.
Two identical $500K properties.
Property A: No Renovations
Basic maintenance
No major upgrades
Accelerated depreciation: $45K–$90K
Property B: $150K Value-Add Renovation
Unit upgrades
Systems replacement
Exterior work
Accelerated depreciation: $120K–$250K+
Same purchase price.
Triple the leverage.
Why Two Similar Properties Produce Wildly Different Results
Here’s what usually creates big gaps.
✔️ Documentation Quality
Detailed invoices and scopes improve classification.
Missing records limit acceleration.
✔️ Management and Use
Short-term vs long-term.
Owner-managed vs fully managed.
These affect usability of losses.
✔️ Timing
Placed-in-service year affects bonus rules and planning windows.
Timing multiplies or shrinks results.
✔️ Strategy Integration
Cost segregation works best when aligned with:
Income planning
Refinance cycles
Renovation schedules
Exit strategy
Disconnected planning wastes potential.
What These Numbers Mean (And What They Don’t)
These ranges show what’s commonly possible.
They are not guarantees.
They are filters.
If your estimated range is small, cost segregation may not be worth it.
And that’s a good outcome.
Avoiding bad investments is a win.
When Cost Seg Usually Makes Sense in This Range
You’re a strong candidate if you:
✔️ Own property worth $200K–$1M
✔️ Have made improvements
✔️ Earn taxable income
✔️ Plan to hold for several years
✔️ Want near-term cash leverage
If several are missing, expectations should be adjusted.
The Bottom Line: Ballparks Create Better Decisions
You don’t need hype.
You need context.
When you understand the drivers, ranges make sense.
When you don’t, every number sounds random.
Smart owners focus on inputs first.
Results follow.
Want Your Personalized Range?
If you’re curious where your property fits, start with our 4-question Snapshot.
Send us:
Property type
Placed-in-service year
Purchase price/value
Renovation spend
We’ll estimate your realistic savings range.
If it’s not impressive enough to justify the process, we’ll tell you to pass.
No pressure.
No sales games.
👉 Send Your Snapshot — Get a Real Answer
Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Always consult your CPA or tax advisor regarding your specific situation.