Rental Property Depreciation: What You Need to Know

Tax-favored depreciation benefits property investors. When you own rental properties, the IRS lets you recoup building costs over time. This lowers taxed income and boosts ROI. Understanding depreciation can help you organize your finances, especially if you are developing wealth with rental real estate properties.
Rental property depreciation?
Property depreciation is the cost reduction throughout its useful life. Buildings and upgrades depreciate, not land.
For residential rental properties, the IRS permits 27.5 years of depreciation. That means you deduct some of the building’s worth from your taxes each year.
Example: Deduct $10,000 per year in depreciation for a $275,000 rental property (excluding land) over 27.5 years.
Depreciation Calculation
Steps to compute depreciation:
- Determine the property’s basis—usually the purchase price.
- Only the building depreciates minus land.
- For residential properties, divide adjusted basis by 27.5.
TIP: Obtain a professional property appraisal to differentiate land and building values.
Depreciate capital improvements individually, therefore keep meticulous records.
Depreciation: What counts?
You can not depreciate all your rental investment. What qualifies and does not:
Depreciable:
- Building itself
- Rental appliances
- Improvements like roofing, plumbing, HVAC
- Not depreciable:
The land
Regular maintenance (painting, repairs)
- Your property’s private spaces
- Understanding Depreciation Recapture When Selling
- When you sell a rental property, the IRS may “recapture” your depreciation. You may owe taxes on depreciation.
- Taxes on depreciation recapture are 25%.
- Accurate records help you plan for selling taxes.
By reinvesting in another rental property, a 1031 exchange can defer taxes.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Avoid these mistakes to save money and avoid IRS issues:
- No property depreciation
- Miscalculating land value
- Not depreciating capital upgrades
- Overstating personal-use depreciation
- Starting and Stopping Depreciation
- You can depreciate a vacant property when it is ready to rent. When depreciation ends:
- You fully depreciated the building after 27.5 years, or
- Selling or using it for personal use ends rental use.
Depreciation Benefits
Many benefits come with depreciation:
- Income tax reduction
- Increases cash flow
- Rental income offset
- Increases rental investment tax efficiency
Professional Help Matters
Tax laws on depreciation are complicated. Use a real estate accounting-savvy tax advisor or CPA. They can assist:
- Maximum deductions
- Avoid costly mistakes
- Possible depreciation recoup
Conclusion
Rental property owners’ best tool is depreciation. By knowing how it works, what qualifies, and how to calculate it, you can lawfully lower your tax burden and keep more rental money. Smart depreciation may help you build wealth through rental real estate properties, whether you are starting out or managing many units.

