Office Buildings Cost Segregation in Wisconsin
Cost segregation on a office buildings in Wisconsin 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.Wisconsin-specific treatment: Wisconsin is partially decoupled from federal bonus depreciation. Expect a state-level addback workaround.
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 Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin treats your federal cost seg deduction
Wisconsin is partially decoupled from federal bonus depreciation. Expect a state-level addback workaround.
Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin addback (if applicable) before finalizing engagement.
Worked example: $750,000 office buildings in Wisconsin
On a $750,000 depreciable basis office buildings in Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin
- Short-Term Rental (Airbnb/Vrbo) cost seg in Wisconsin
- Single-Family Rental cost seg in Wisconsin
- Multi-Family (5+ units) cost seg in Wisconsin
FAQ
- Can I do cost segregation on a office buildings in Wisconsin?
- Yes. Cost segregation under IRC Section 168(k) is a federal tax strategy applying to office buildings property anywhere in the United States, including Wisconsin. 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 Wisconsin treat federal bonus depreciation on a office buildings?
- Wisconsin is partially decoupled from federal bonus depreciation. Expect a state-level addback workaround.
- What does the OBBBA 100% bonus depreciation mean for office buildings in Wisconsin?
- 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. Wisconsin's treatment: Wisconsin is partially decoupled from federal bonus depreciation. Expect a state-level addback workaround.
- Is the cost seg loss on a Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin 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.