The records and facts that make a cost segregation review more efficient, better supported, and useful for current cash flow.
Documentation changes the quality of the review
A cost segregation study is not only an engineering exercise. It is also a documentation exercise. The better the records, the easier it is to support conclusions and move efficiently.
The planning value is timing. When shorter-life property can be documented, owners may be able to move deductions forward rather than waiting across the standard long-life recovery period.
Strong starting records
- Closing statement and purchase agreement
- Site plans, drawings, or construction documents
- Appraisal and inspection reports
- Improvement invoices and contractor payment records
- Current fixed asset and depreciation schedules
Records that often need follow-up
- Contractor schedules that separate building shell, site work, and tenant improvements
- Vendor invoices for electrical, plumbing, lighting, flooring, and specialized equipment
- Photos, inspection notes, or capital budgets that explain property condition at acquisition
- Prior-year depreciation workpapers when the property has already been placed in service
CPA coordination
The study is strongest when the CPA knows which tax year is being affected, whether amended returns are under consideration, and how the final asset detail should be delivered for return preparation.
Owners do not need a perfect file to start, but they should know which documents are missing before return deadlines get close.
