Investor Education

The Short-Term Rental Investor's Guide to Bonus Depreciation

Most Airbnb and VRBO investors know depreciation is valuable — but few understand how to maximize it before they buy. Here's everything you need to know about IRS §168(k) and why the property you choose matters as much as the tax election.

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100%
Bonus depreciation rate for 2025 and beyond — permanently restored by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act for property placed in service after Jan 19, 2025.
~$110k
Estimated Year 1 bonus depreciation deduction on a typical $600k STR (20% land, 23% eligible) — worth ~$41k in tax savings at the 37% bracket.
18–25%
Typical share of an STR purchase price that is bonus-eligible. The property you choose can shift this by 10+ points.

What is bonus depreciation?

When you buy an investment property, the IRS generally requires you to deduct the cost of the structure over 27.5 years (residential) or 39 years (commercial). That slow, straight-line depreciation has been the default since the 1980s.

Bonus depreciation — codified in IRS §168(k) — changes that. It allows you to take an immediate, first-year deduction on qualifying property components rather than spreading the deduction over decades. For a high-value STR in a desirable market, that can mean $80,000–$250,000 deducted in Year 1.

The key word is qualifying. Not everything in a property qualifies. The IRS divides property into classes based on useful life, and only certain classes are eligible for bonus depreciation:

Class Examples Useful Life Bonus Eligible?
5-Year Personal Property Appliances, cabinetry, countertops, flooring, fixtures, FF&E, recessed lighting, window treatments 5 years ✓ YES
15-Year Land Improvements Driveways, landscaping, patios, fencing, outdoor lighting, irrigation, retaining walls 15 years ✓ YES
39-Year Structural Foundation, framing, roof, windows, HVAC, plumbing rough-in, electrical rough-in, drywall 39 years ✗ NOT eligible
Land The underlying dirt Infinite ✗ NEVER depreciable

The share of your purchase price that falls into the 5-year and 15-year buckets is your bonus-eligible amount. A property with heavy finishes, lots of outdoor amenities, and a low land value ratio will have more bonus-eligible assets than a bare-bones property on a large lot — even at the same purchase price.

Why short-term rentals are uniquely positioned

Not all rental property investors benefit equally from bonus depreciation. STR investors have a structural advantage that most people overlook.

1. The STR tax election eliminates the passive activity limitation. Under normal IRS rules, rental losses are passive and can only offset passive income — meaning most investors can't use depreciation deductions to offset W-2 salary. STRs, however, qualify for an exception: if you materially participate in the rental activity and average rental stays are 7 days or fewer, the IRS treats it as an active business. That means depreciation losses can offset any income, including a high W-2 salary.

2. STR properties are typically well-furnished. Airbnb and VRBO properties compete on finishes, amenities, and guest experience. That means more 5-year personal property — appliances, furnishings, decorative fixtures — which are the highest-value bonus-eligible assets.

3. Outdoor amenities are land improvements. Hot tubs, fire pits, patios, pools, fencing, and landscaping that LTR landlords skip are standard in the STR market. All qualify as 15-year property eligible for bonus dep.

The STR Rule: To qualify for active treatment, your average rental stay must be 7 days or fewer AND you must materially participate (500+ hours/year, or >10% of total rental hours). Consult your CPA to confirm your situation qualifies before relying on these deductions.

How bonus depreciation actually works

Bonus depreciation is claimed through a process called cost segregation. A cost seg engineer inspects the property and reclassifies components of the purchase price from the default 27.5/39-year buckets into shorter-lived classes. Bonus dep is then applied to those reclassified amounts.

Here's the flow:

Simplified Example

$700k STR purchase — what happens in Year 1

Purchase price $700,000
Land value (not depreciable) $105,000 (15%)
Depreciable basis (structure + improvements) $595,000
Cost seg — 5-year personal property $126,000 (18%)
Cost seg — 15-year land improvements $42,000 (6%)
Total bonus-eligible (5yr + 15yr) $168,000 (24% of purchase)
Bonus dep rate (2025+) 100%
Year 1 bonus deduction $168,000
Tax savings at 37% bracket $62,160
Year 1 cash back as % of down payment (15% down = $105k) 59%

That $62k doesn't appear as a check — it reduces the taxes you'd otherwise owe on other income. Put another way: on a 15% down payment of $105k, you recover 59% of it in Year 1 through tax savings alone.

100% bonus dep is back — permanently

Bonus depreciation was set to 100% by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, then began stepping down in 2023. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) permanently restored it to 100% for property placed in service after January 19, 2025 — including 2026, 2027, and beyond.

Tax Year Bonus Dep Rate On $168k eligible assets
202380%$134,400 deduction
202460%$100,800 deduction
2025 (after Jan 19)100%$168,000 deduction
2026100%$168,000 deduction
2027100%$168,000 deduction
2028+100% (permanent)$168,000 deduction
What this means for buyers today: Every STR purchase placed in service in 2026 qualifies for full 100% immediate deduction on all bonus-eligible assets. The case for screening properties by depreciation potential has never been stronger — because the upside is now fully unlocked.

Property choice determines outcome — a real comparison

The most common mistake STR investors make is treating bonus depreciation as a tax election, not a buying criterion. The truth is that two properties at the same price point in the same market can have wildly different bonus dep outcomes — and you won't know the difference until after you close, unless you screen first.

Side-by-Side Comparison — $599k, Joshua Tree, CA

Property A: Desert cabin on 5-acre lot

Land value (large rural lot) ~$240k (40%)
Bonus-eligible assets (minimal finishes, no outdoor amenities) ~$60k (10%)
Year 1 bonus deduction at 100% ~$60k
Tax savings at 37% ~$22k
Year 1 cash back as % of down payment (15% = $90k) ~24%
Higher-Scoring Property

Property B: Modern cabin, high-finish, hot tub, patio, landscaped

Land value (small lot in town) ~$90k (15%)
Bonus-eligible assets (stone counters, appliances, outdoor amenities) ~$150k (25%)
Year 1 bonus deduction at 100% ~$150k
Tax savings at 37% ~$55k
Year 1 cash back as % of down payment (15% = $90k) ~61%

Same market. Same price. $33,000 difference in Year 1 tax savings — and 37 percentage points of your down payment recovered. At 100% bonus dep, choosing the right property matters more than ever.

How to screen properties before you buy

Most investors don't find out their bonus dep potential until they commission a cost seg study — which typically happens 6–12 months after closing, costs $4,000–8,000, and can't change the outcome. You already bought the property.

The better approach is to screen properties during the search, before making an offer. There are three signals that predict bonus dep potential without a full study:

1. Land value ratio. Land is never depreciable. A property where 40% of the value is in the lot has a much smaller depreciable basis than one where 15% is land. County assessors publish land vs. improvement breakdowns — or tools like DepreciMax pull this automatically.

2. Finish quality and amenities. High-finish properties — stone countertops, custom cabinetry, premium appliances, outdoor living spaces — have more 5-year and 15-year property packed into them. Price per square foot is a reasonable proxy: a $600/SF cabin in Ketchum has richer finishes than a $250/SF cabin in rural Tennessee.

3. Property age. Newer properties have more original finishes that qualify under cost seg. Older properties may have been renovated (good) or may have outdated finishes that don't classify as well.

Free tool: DepreciMax combines land value data, price/SF signals, and construction age to score every property on its bonus depreciation potential — before you make an offer. Free for your first search.

When to commission a full cost seg study

A cost seg study is a formal engineering analysis that produces IRS-defensible classification of every building component. It's done by a specialist firm and typically costs $4,000–8,000.

Worth it if: Your purchase price is above $400k, you are in the 32%+ bracket, and the property scores reasonably well on the pre-purchase signals above. For a $700k property with 20%+ bonus-eligible potential, a $5,000 cost seg study that unlocks $35,000+ in tax savings has a 7:1 return.

May not be worth it if: The property has a high land value ratio, minimal finishes, or a low purchase price. Running a $5,000 study on a $200k cabin with minimal bonus-eligible assets often doesn't pencil out.

The DepreciMax property report ($200/$150 for members) is designed to answer the question before you commission a full study — giving you enough confidence to know whether the $5,000 engagement is justified.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to materially participate in my STR to use these deductions?
Yes — to deduct rental losses against ordinary income (like W-2 wages), you generally need to meet the material participation test: either 500+ hours/year in the activity or more than any other person involved. Without material participation, losses are passive and can only offset passive income. Consult a CPA familiar with STR tax rules before relying on this strategy.
What happens when I sell the property?
Depreciation you've taken is "recaptured" at sale, taxed at a maximum 25% rate (unrecaptured §1250 gain) rather than ordinary income rates. This is still almost always favorable — you're trading future ordinary income deductions for a lower recapture rate at sale, often years later. In a 1031 exchange, recapture can be deferred entirely.
Does bonus depreciation create a loss that can carry forward?
If the bonus deduction exceeds your income in the year taken, the excess becomes a Net Operating Loss (NOL) that can carry forward indefinitely to future tax years under current law.
Is the property type important — cabin vs. condo vs. house?
Yes. Condos carry $0 land value (land is shared across all units) and their common areas often qualify as 15-year land improvements on a pro-rata basis — both of which increase your eligible amount. This matters most at the individual property level: when you run a report on a specific condo, those factors are scored directly. At the zip level, condo ratio is a minor signal — the dominant driver is still land value ratio for the market overall.
Is 100% bonus depreciation really permanent now?
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation for qualified property placed in service after January 19, 2025. Unlike the TCJA's temporary provision, this has no scheduled phase-down. That said, tax law can always change — future legislation could alter it. Act on current law, not speculation, and confirm the latest rates with your CPA before closing.
How accurate are DepreciMax scores without a full cost seg study?
DepreciMax uses real county assessor land values (via ATTOM Data) combined with property age, price/SF signals, and AI photo analysis to estimate bonus dep potential. Calibration testing shows estimates are typically within ±5% of the bonus-eligible percentage produced by a formal cost seg study. They're designed to screen properties — not replace an engineer's analysis.

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