Why a technically correct cost segregation report still needs taxpayer context, CPA coordination, and lifecycle planning to become usable tax savings.
The building is only part of the study
A cost segregation study can be accurate, defensible, and still incomplete as a planning tool if no one connects it to the owner's actual tax profile.
The useful review starts with the taxpayer: income sources, tax brackets, passive activity limitations, real estate professional status, entity structure, state exposure, holding period, disposition plan, and estate goals. The building tells the engineer what can be reclassified. The taxpayer tells the advisory team whether the benefit can actually be used.
Why generic savings math fails
Many benefit analyses multiply deductions by a high tax bracket and present the result as savings. That can overstate the actual result when the owner's income falls across several brackets, the deduction offsets lower-bracket income, or future recapture is not modeled.
The same study can be valuable for one owner and much less useful for another. The difference is not the building. It is the taxpayer's facts.
What JPOPE reviews before the work moves
- Current and prior-year tax profile
- Entity structure and basis records
- Passive and active income classification
- Holding timeline and likely exit path
- CPA needs for return preparation
- Whether bonus depreciation, standard acceleration, or a slower schedule fits the plan
Advisor takeaway
The goal is not to sell every possible study. The goal is to recommend the study, timing, and depreciation strategy that the owner and CPA can actually use.
