Cost Segregation in Charlotte, North Carolina
Cost segregation in Charlotte, North Carolina follows the same federal IRC Section 168(k) rules as anywhere in the United States: reclassify a portion of basis from 27.5 or 39 year recovery into 5, 7, and 15 year buckets so 100% bonus depreciation under OBBBA applies in year one. State-level treatment depends on North Carolina conformity. Local market color: Banking-anchored metro. NC partial conformity. Strong population inflow.
The Charlotte market in one paragraph
Banking-anchored metro. NC partial conformity. Strong population inflow. Top property types in the Charlotte market: Multifamily, Single-Family Rental, Office. County: Mecklenburg. Each property type carries a different cost segregation reclassification profile based on its component mix. STRs and hotels reclassify more aggressively (25-30% typical) because of the FF&E density. Single-family rentals reclassify in the 18-22% band. Multifamily lands in 20-25%.
How North Carolina treats your federal cost seg deduction
North Carolina is partially decoupled from federal bonus depreciation. Expect a state-level addback workaround.
For Charlotte investors, this determines whether the cost seg benefit is purely federal or stacks with state-level savings. Coordinate with your CPA on the state addback (if applicable) before finalizing the engagement.
Worked example: a $750K Charlotte property
On a $750K depreciable basis residential rental in Charlotte acquired with a binding contract on or after January 20, 2025: cost segregation typically reclassifies 20-25% into 5-year personal property and 8-10% into 15-year land improvements. Combined reclassification: roughly $187K to $225K.
- 5-year reclassification (20%): ~$150,000
- 15-year reclassification (8%): ~$60,000
- First-year deduction at 100% bonus: ~$210,000
- Estimated federal tax savings at 32% marginal: ~$67,200
- Estimated federal tax savings at 37% top marginal: ~$77,700
Whether the loss is usable this year depends on the Charlotte investor's tax profile. REPS qualification, STR loophole, or other passive income unlock immediate offset against W-2 or active income. Without one of those, the loss suspends as a passive activity loss under IRC Section 469(b) and carries forward until released.
Which WeCostSeg tier is right for your Charlotte property
- Residential under $800K basis: $795 Rapid Report. 5-10 business day turnaround.
- Residential or small multifamily up to $2M basis: $2,495 Fully Engineered Residential. 2-3 week turnaround.
- Commercial or larger properties: $2,995+ Fully Engineered Commercial. 3-4 week turnaround with on-site inspection.
All tiers include five years of written audit defense at no extra charge. Every study addresses the 13 Principal Elements of a Quality Cost Segregation Study under IRS Publication 5653 Chapter 4.
Other cities in North Carolina
FAQ
- Is cost segregation available for Charlotte rental property?
- Yes. Cost segregation under IRC Section 168(k) is a federal tax strategy that applies to rental real estate anywhere in the United States, including Charlotte, North Carolina. The federal benefit is identical across cities. State-level treatment varies by North Carolina conformity rules.
- How does North Carolina treat federal bonus depreciation on a Charlotte property?
- North Carolina is partially decoupled from federal bonus depreciation. Expect a state-level addback workaround.
- What property types are most common for cost seg in Charlotte?
- The Charlotte market is led by Multifamily, Single-Family Rental, Office. Each property type carries different reclassification potential: STRs typically yield 25-30% reclassification, multifamily 20-25%, single-family rental 18-22%, and commercial 22-28%.
- Does the OBBBA Jan 19, 2025 cliff apply to Charlotte acquisitions?
- Yes. The cliff is a federal acquisition-date rule under amended IRC Section 168(k). Binding contracts on or before January 19, 2025 stay on the legacy phase-down. Binding contracts on or after January 20, 2025 qualify for permanent 100% bonus depreciation under Public Law 119-21.
- What WeCostSeg tier is right for a Charlotte property?
- For a residential under $800K basis, the $795 Rapid Report. For residential or small multifamily up to $2M, the $2,495 Fully Engineered Residential. For commercial or larger properties, the $2,995+ Fully Engineered Commercial. All tiers include five years of audit defense.
- Is site inspection in-person or virtual for Charlotte studies?
- Virtual inspection (video walkthrough with the owner or property manager) is acceptable for residential Charlotte properties under IRS Publication 5653 February 2025 edition. In-person inspection is preferred for commercial, hotel, restaurant, and large multifamily Charlotte properties.
- Can I do a look-back study on a Charlotte property I bought years ago?
- Yes. A look-back study captures missed depreciation via Form 3115 (Designated Change Number 7) under Rev. Proc. 2022-14. The Section 481(a) catch-up adjustment posts in the year of change without amending prior returns.
- How does WeCostSeg coordinate with my Charlotte CPA?
- Every engagement follows the three-touch CPA Coordination Protocol. Preliminary analysis CC'd to your CPA on intake, draft report shared five business days before final delivery, and Form 3115 filing coordinated when a Section 481(a) adjustment applies.
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.