Real estate investors often assume the biggest tax breaks come when you buy a new property, but that's not always true. In 2025, a powerful combination of updated depreciation rules and existing IRS procedures allows you to unlock massive deductions on properties you already own. By leveraging a cost segregation study, Form 3115, and the IRC §481(a) adjustment, you can accelerate years of missed depreciation into a single tax year, without amending a single return.
In this article, we’ll break down exactly how this works, including:
- How the new law interacts with older properties
- What the §481(a) catch-up adjustment really is
- Why Form 3115 is the linchpin to triggering it
- A full numerical example showing how it works
- Critical compliance steps to execute this correctly
Let’s dive in.
🏗️ The Setup: A Rental Property Purchased Years Ago
Let’s say you bought a $800,000 rental property in 2020, allocating $700,000 to the building and $100,000 to land (which isn’t depreciable). You’ve been depreciating that $700,000 over 27.5 years using straight-line MACRS—about $25,455 per year.
By 2024, you’ll have taken about $121,000 in depreciation.
So far, this is standard stuff. But it’s also inefficient because, without a cost segregation study, you’re missing out on tens of thousands in faster depreciation and early tax savings.
💡 The 2025 Game Changer: New Law + Old Asset + Right Strategy
With the passage of the "One Big Beautiful Bill," 100% bonus depreciation is now permanently back for all qualified property placed in service on or after January 20, 2025.
This raises a big question:
What if I already own a property placed in service years ago—can I still claim 100% bonus depreciation?
Answer: Yes—if you reclassify assets via a cost segregation study and properly file IRS Form 3115.
📑 Enter Form 3115 + §481(a)
IRS Form 3115 is used to request a change in accounting method—in this case, to change how you depreciate your rental property after performing a cost segregation study.
When you file this form, the IRS doesn’t require you to amend prior-year returns. Instead, it uses Section 481(a) to determine the net adjustment between:
- What depreciation you should have taken under the new method, vs.
- What you actually took under the old straight-line method.
You then deduct that entire difference in the year of change—a §481(a) catch-up deduction.
🔍 Real Numbers: Full Walkthrough
🧾 Property Details
- Purchase Year: April 1st, 2020
- Building Value: $700,000
- No cost segregation was done originally
🧮 Depreciation Already Taken (2020–2024)
Year | Depreciation (27.5-year SL) |
---|---|
2020 (9 mo) | $19,091 |
2021–2024 | $25,455 × 4 = $101,820 |
Total | $120,911 |
🛠️ 2025 Cost Segregation Study Results
Asset Category | MACRS Life | Amount |
---|---|---|
5-year property | 5 years | $60,000 |
15-year improvements | 15 years | $40,000 |
Building structure | 27.5 years | $600,000 |
Under the new method, bonus depreciation applies to 5 and 15-year assets if they are treated as placed in service on or after January 20, 2025. That’s precisely what Form 3115 allows.
🔁 Calculating the §481(a) Adjustment
What you should have depreciated from 2020–2024 (under the new method):
♦️ 100% bonus depreciation on 5- and 15-year property in 2020:
$60,000 + $40,000 = $100,000
♦️ SL depreciation on the $600,000 structure:
$600,000 ÷ 27.5 × 5 = $109,090
♦️ Total new-method depreciation (2020–2024):
$209,090
What you actually took:
$120,911
§481(a) catch-up deduction for 2025 = $209,090 – $120,911 = $88,179
This means the IRS lets you deduct $88,179 in 2025 to "true-up" your depreciation history, without amending a single return.
📅 What About 2025 Depreciation?
You still get a normal 2025 depreciation deduction under the new method:
- $600,000 structure × 1/27.5 = $21,818 (annual building depreciation)
So your total 2025 deduction is:
✅ $88,179 (catch-up via §481(a))✅ $21,818 (2025 regular depreciation)
= $109,997 total depreciation deduction in 2025
🔓 Why This Works: IRS Procedure
This isn’t a loophole. The IRS explicitly allows this strategy:
- Rev. Proc. 2015-13 and Rev. Proc. 2019-43 permit automatic method changes using Form 3115 for depreciation purposes.
- The IRS treats reclassified assets as newly placed in service in the year of change, making them eligible for 100% bonus depreciation if the law permits.
- You take the full §481(a) catch-up deduction in that year.
This is standard practice for real estate firms, cost segregation professionals, and even Fortune 500 companies using fixed asset systems.
⚠️ Compliance Notes
To execute this strategy properly:
- Engage a qualified cost segregation firm. Sloppy studies = disallowed deductions.
- File Form 3115 correctly, including a §481(a) calculation. This form is complex and requires supporting documentation.
- Ensure your timing is right. Assets must be treated as placed in service on or after January 20th, 2025 to qualify for 100% bonus.
- Track passive activity rules. These deductions may be limited by passive income unless the taxpayer qualifies as a real estate professional or materially participates in the activity.
🧠 Bottom Line
The return of 100% bonus depreciation in 2025 is big news, but the real strategic edge is how you combine it with:
- A cost segregation study
- A Form 3115 method change
- A §481(a) adjustment
This trifecta enables real estate investors to accelerate depreciation on older properties and potentially offset hundreds of thousands of dollars in passive income, all within a single tax year.
📣 Want Help Running the Numbers?
Real estate investors don’t need another one-off tax trick—they need a partner who understands how to turn complexity into long-term advantage. That’s precisely what the 2025 tax law unlocks when paired with the right strategy. By combining a cost segregation study, IRS Form 3115, and the §481(a) adjustment, investors can accelerate years of missed depreciation into a single deduction—often six figures or more—even on properties they’ve owned for years. It’s a powerful example of what thoughtful, relationship-driven planning can deliver when you go beyond basic compliance.
👉 Book a discovery call to find out how this strategy could lower your next tax bill
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