Office Buildings Cost Segregation in Nebraska
Cost segregation on a office buildings in Nebraska reclassifies basis from the standard 39-year recovery period into 5-year personal property and 15-year land improvements. Industry-typical reclassification: 10-15% to 5-year, 5-10% to 15-year, 70-82% on the long schedule.Nebraska-specific treatment: Nebraska provides expanded conformity above the federal baseline.
The office buildings component profile
Lower 5-year allocation. Personal property mainly cabling, security, decorative items. Land improvements include parking and landscaping. Best with newer Class A buildings.
Each office buildings property in Nebraska is analyzed for its specific component mix. The percentages above are industry midpoints. Engineered studies on a specific office buildings can push the reclassified portion higher when the property has above-average FF&E density (renovated kitchens, high-end finishes, extensive landscaping, specialized lighting).
How Nebraska treats your federal cost seg deduction
Nebraska provides expanded conformity above the federal baseline.
Nebraska treatment of federal bonus depreciation determines whether the cost seg benefit is purely federal or stacks with state-level savings. Coordinate with your CPA on the Nebraska addback (if applicable) before finalizing engagement.
Worked example: $750,000 office buildings in Nebraska
On a $750,000 depreciable basis office buildings in Nebraska acquired with a binding contract on or after January 20, 2025: cost segregation reclassifies roughly $75,000 into 5-year personal property and $37,500 into 15-year land improvements. Combined first-year deduction at 100% bonus depreciation: $112,500. Estimated federal tax savings at a 32% combined marginal rate: $36,000. At a 37% top marginal rate: $41,625.
- Depreciable basis: $750,000
- 5-year reclassification (10-15%): ~$75,000
- 15-year reclassification (5-10%): ~$37,500
- First-year deduction at 100% bonus: ~$112,500
- Estimated federal tax savings at 32% marginal: ~$36,000
- Estimated federal tax savings at 37% top marginal: ~$41,625
Loss usability for Nebraska office buildings investors
Whether the cost seg loss is usable this year depends on the investor's profile. Three paths unlock immediate offset against W-2 or active income: REPS qualification under IRC Section 469(c)(7), STR loophole under Reg. 1.469-1T(e)(3)(ii), or other passive income to absorb the loss. Without one of these, the loss suspends under Section 469(b) and carries forward indefinitely until released.
Other property types in Nebraska
- Short-Term Rental (Airbnb/Vrbo) cost seg in Nebraska
- Single-Family Rental cost seg in Nebraska
- Multi-Family (5+ units) cost seg in Nebraska
FAQ
- Can I do cost segregation on a office buildings in Nebraska?
- Yes. Cost segregation under IRC Section 168(k) is a federal tax strategy applying to office buildings property anywhere in the United States, including Nebraska. Typical reclassification on a office buildings: 10-15% into 5-year personal property, 5-10% into 15-year land improvements, 70-82% on the long 39-year schedule.
- How does Nebraska treat federal bonus depreciation on a office buildings?
- Nebraska provides expanded conformity above the federal baseline.
- What does the OBBBA 100% bonus depreciation mean for office buildings in Nebraska?
- For property acquired with a binding contract on or after January 20, 2025 under Public Law 119-21, the reclassified portion (5-year, 7-year, and 15-year) of a office buildings receives 100% bonus depreciation in year one. Nebraska's treatment: Nebraska provides expanded conformity above the federal baseline.
- Is the cost seg loss on a Nebraska office buildings usable against W-2 income?
- Depends on the investor's tax profile. REPS qualification under IRC Section 469(c)(7) treats rental losses as nonpassive and offsets W-2 immediately. The STR loophole under Reg. 1.469-1T(e)(3)(ii) applies when the average customer use is 7 days or less and the owner materially participates. Without one of those, the loss suspends under Section 469.
- What's the recapture risk on a Nebraska office buildings with cost seg?
- Section 1245 recapture applies to the reclassified 5-year and 15-year portions at ordinary rates. Section 1250 unrecaptured gain applies to the long-schedule portion at up to 25%. A 1031 exchange under IRC Section 1031 defers all of it. Hold-to-death produces a basis step-up under IRC Section 1014 that erases the recapture entirely.
- What WeCostSeg tier is right for a Nebraska office buildings?
- Tier selection depends on basis. Under $800K residential: $795 Rapid Report. Up to $2M residential or small multifamily: $2,495 Fully Engineered Residential. Commercial of any size: $2,995+ Fully Engineered Commercial. All tiers include five years of audit defense.
- Can I do a look-back study on a Nebraska office buildings I bought years ago?
- Yes. Form 3115 with Designated Change Number 7 under Rev. Proc. 2022-14 captures missed depreciation via a Section 481(a) catch-up posted in the year of change without amending prior returns.
- Is virtual inspection acceptable for a Nebraska office buildings?
- Virtual inspection is acceptable for residential and small multifamily office buildings properties under IRS Publication 5653 February 2025 edition. In-person inspection is preferred for hotels, restaurants, large commercial, and FF&E-intensive office buildings properties.
Zawwad Ul Sami, Founder
Zawwad Ul Sami is the founder of WeCostSeg, a founder-led cost segregation firm serving real estate investors across the US. He focuses on strategy, pricing, and the firm's overall direction.