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This article is presented by Cost Segregation Guys.
One of the most common questions I get from real estate investors is whether owning a short-term rental changes how they should think about taxes.
The short answer is yes, and in some cases significantly. The type of rental you own affects how your income is classified, how your losses can be used, and whether strategies like cost segregation will actually move the needle for you.
Let me walk through the key differences so you can see where you stand.
STR vs. Long-Term Rental Tax Treatment Basics
When you own a long-term rental, the income you earn is treated as passive income under the tax code. That means if your property generates a loss, which is common in the early years when depreciation is high, that loss can only be used to offset other passive income.
Unless you qualify as a real estate professional, you generally cannot use rental losses to offset your W-2 or business income. There are some exceptions, including a $25,000 allowance for active participants with adjusted gross income under $100,000, but for higher-income investors, passive loss limitations are a real constraint.
Short-term rentals operate under a different set of rules, which is where things get interesting. The IRS does not automatically classify STR income as passive. If you materially participate in your short-term rental, meaning you are actively involved in running it and meet one of the IRS material participation tests, the income and losses from that property are treated as non-passive.
That one distinction opens up a door that long-term rental investors typically cannot access: the ability to use rental losses to offset ordinary income.
How Accelerated Depreciation Interacts with STR Income
This is where cost segregation becomes especially powerful for STR owners. When you commission a cost segregation study on a short-term rental, you are not just accelerating depreciation in the abstract. If your STR qualifies as non-passive activity through material participation, the large depreciation deductions generated by a cost seg study can flow directly against your ordinary income in the year you take them. For an investor in a high tax bracket, that can mean tens of thousands of dollars in real tax savings in year one.
For long-term rental owners, the math is different. A cost segregation study will still generate substantial accelerated depreciation, but if you cannot use those losses against ordinary income due to passive activity rules, they carry forward until you have passive income to absorb them or until you sell the property. The deductions are not lost, but they are deferred, and deferred savings are worth less than immediate savings.
There is an important exception here for real estate professionals. If you or your spouse qualifies as a real estate professional under IRC Section 469, your rental activities are not subject to the passive loss rules, and accelerated depreciation from a cost seg study on any of your rentals can offset ordinary income.
This is a significant planning opportunity, but the requirements are strict: You must spend more than 750 hours per year in real estate activities and more than half of your total working hours in real estate.
Who Benefits More, and Why
STR investors who materially participate in their properties are often the biggest beneficiaries of cost segregation, particularly in the first few years of ownership when bonus depreciation is in play. The combination of non-passive treatment and accelerated depreciation can create a paper loss large enough to eliminate a significant portion of the investor’s tax bill for that year, even when the property itself is cash flow positive.
Long-term rental investors still benefit from cost segregation, but the benefit profile looks different. The value tends to show up over time as losses offset passive income from other properties or as a large deduction in the year of sale. Investors who own multiple long-term rentals and generate passive income across their portfolio can often absorb the losses generated by a cost seg study more effectively than someone with a single property and no other passive income.
The investor who benefits least from cost segregation is someone who owns a single long-term rental, earns a high W-2 income, does not qualify as a real estate professional, and has no other passive income to absorb the losses. That does not mean cost segregation is useless in that situation, but it does mean the timing of the benefit is different, and the study needs to be evaluated accordingly.
Situations Where Cost Seg Timing Matters
Timing is not just about when you do the study. It is about making sure the depreciation hits in a year when you can actually use it.
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Year of purchase
The best time for most investors to do a cost segregation study is in the same year they purchase or place the property in service. This is when bonus depreciation can be applied to the reclassified assets, and it is when the deductions are largest. Waiting a year or two does not eliminate the benefit, but it does reduce it, since bonus depreciation percentages have been stepping down each year.
Before a high-income year
If you know you are going to have an unusually high-income year, whether from a business sale, a large bonus, or a significant capital gain, that is an ideal time to accelerate depreciation on a property you own. Pairing a cost seg study with a high-income year can offset income that would otherwise be taxed at the highest marginal rates.
Before a property sale
This one surprises some investors: Taking accelerated depreciation through a cost seg study does not eliminate depreciation recapture when you sell. However, if you are planning a 1031 exchange, the recapture gets deferred along with the gain, and the accelerated deductions you took in prior years were still real savings in real dollars. The timing of a study relative to a planned sale is worth a conversation with your CPA.
When you convert an STR to a long-term rental, or vice versa
If you are converting a property from short-term to long-term use or planning to, the tax treatment of any existing cost seg study does not reset automatically. But your ability to use the losses going forward may change significantly depending on how the converted property is classified and whether material participation still applies. This is a situation where getting in front of the numbers before the conversion, not after, makes a real difference.
The bottom line is that short-term and long-term rentals are not taxed the same way, and they should not be approached with the same tax strategy. Cost segregation works for both, but the timing, the benefit size, and the mechanics are different, depending on which type of property you own and what your broader tax picture looks like.
Want to Know What Your Property Could Generate?
If you are trying to figure out whether a cost segregation study makes sense for your rental portfolio, whether it is a short-term rental, a multifamily, or a mix of both, I recommend reaching out to Cost Segregation Guys. They specialize in working with real estate investors and will run a free analysis for you before you commit to anything. They bring licensed engineers and real tax expertise together, which is exactly what you need to make sure a study is done right and holds up if the IRS ever comes knocking.

















