Depreciation is the single most powerful tax benefit for U.S. rental property owners. It can turn real cash flow into little or no taxable income, which is why experienced investors obsess over it. This guide shows exactly how depreciation lowers taxes in 2026 and how to apply it without mistakes.
Summary Depreciation is a non-cash expense that reduces your taxable rental income each year. Even if your rental property makes cash flow, depreciation can cut the taxable amount to near zero.
Table of Contents
- Quick Answer: How Does Depreciation Lower Taxes?
- The TAX Shield Formula
- Step 1: Calculate Your Depreciable Basis
- Step 2: Apply the IRS Schedule
- Step 3: Apply Depreciation to Your Rental Income
- Cash Flow vs Taxable Income
- Depreciation and Passive Loss Limits
- Bonus Depreciation and Short-Lived Assets
- Common Scenarios and Examples
- Year 1 vs Year 10: How the Benefit Changes Over Time
- Impact on Cash-on-Cash Returns
- Planning Tips to Maximize Depreciation Benefits
- Recordkeeping Checklist
- State Tax Nuances
- Depreciation and Refinancing
- Common Mistakes and Audit Risks
- FAQs
- Updated for 2026: What to Watch
- Change Log
Quick Answer: How Does Depreciation Lower Taxes?
Depreciation reduces your taxable rental income by letting you deduct part of the building's cost each year. Because it is a non-cash expense, you get a tax deduction without spending money during that year.
If your depreciation deduction is large enough, it can offset most or all of your rental income.
The TAX Shield Formula
Use this simplified formula to understand the impact:
Taxable rental income
= Rental income
- Cash expenses (repairs, taxes, insurance, management)
- Depreciation
Tax savings
= Depreciation x your marginal tax rate
Caption: Depreciation reduces taxable income even though no cash leaves your account.
Step 1: Calculate Your Depreciable Basis
Your depreciable basis is the building value, not the land.
If you buy a property for $400,000 and the land is worth $100,000, the depreciable basis is $300,000.
You can also add capital improvements to basis, which increases depreciation.
For the fundamentals, see Depreciation Explained Simply.
Step 2: Apply the IRS Schedule
For residential rentals, the IRS uses 27.5 years straight-line depreciation. That means you deduct roughly 1/27.5 of your building basis each year.
Example:
$300,000 / 27.5 = $10,909 annual depreciation.
Step 3: Apply Depreciation to Your Rental Income
Now apply the deduction to your rental income:
Rental income: $24,000
Cash expenses: $9,000
Depreciation: $10,909
Taxable rental income: $4,091
This is why depreciation is so valuable.
Cash Flow vs Taxable Income
Many investors confuse these. Cash flow is the money in your pocket after expenses. Taxable income is what the IRS sees after depreciation.
Example:
If your rental generates $6,000 in cash flow but you take $11,000 in depreciation, you could show a taxable loss while still making money.
Depreciation and Passive Loss Limits
Depreciation can create a paper loss. Whether you can deduct that loss depends on the passive activity rules.
- Some taxpayers can use up to $25,000 of rental losses if their income is below certain thresholds.
- High earners often have to carry losses forward.
See Passive Loss Rules Explained for details.
Bonus Depreciation and Short-Lived Assets
Certain components of a rental property may qualify for faster depreciation, such as appliances, carpeting, or landscaping.
Cost segregation can break out these components into shorter schedules, which can increase deductions early on. This adds complexity but can be valuable for higher-income investors.
Common Scenarios and Examples
Example 1: Standard Rental
Building basis: $275,000
Annual depreciation: $10,000
Rental income after expenses: $12,000
Taxable rental income: $2,000
Example 2: Depreciation Creates a Loss
Building basis: $400,000
Annual depreciation: $14,545
Cash income after expenses: $8,000
Taxable rental income: -$6,545 (paper loss)
Example 3: Adding Improvements
You add a $30,000 roof replacement.
This increases basis and adds depreciation each year, reducing taxable income further.
Year 1 vs Year 10: How the Benefit Changes Over Time
Depreciation is steady each year under straight-line rules, but your tax situation can change.
Year 1:
You might have higher deductions because of repairs, leasing costs, or vacancy expenses. Depreciation can turn a small profit into a tax loss.
Year 10:
Your expenses might be lower, so depreciation becomes the main shield. At this stage, it often keeps taxable income much lower than cash flow.
The key takeaway: depreciation provides a predictable baseline tax benefit even when cash expenses fluctuate.
Impact on Cash-on-Cash Returns
Cash-on-cash return looks only at cash flow, not tax savings. Depreciation can significantly improve your after-tax return.
Example:
Annual cash flow: $8,000
Depreciation tax savings (22 percent bracket): $2,400
After-tax return feels more like $10,400 in benefit.
This is why two properties with the same cash flow can produce very different after-tax results.
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Planning Tips to Maximize Depreciation Benefits
- Track land vs building value. Overstating land reduces depreciation.
- Document improvements. Improvements increase basis and deductions.
- Start depreciation on placed-in-service date. Not when you close.
- Consider cost segregation for large or high-income deals.
- Coordinate with passive loss rules to make sure you can use the losses.
Recordkeeping Checklist
Keep records that support your depreciation claim and future recapture calculation:
- Closing statement and purchase price
- Land vs building allocation support
- Improvement invoices and receipts
- Depreciation schedules by year
- Placed-in-service date evidence
Digital copies are fine. Keep these until you sell.
State Tax Nuances
Some states do not follow federal depreciation rules or allow different schedules.
If your state disallows certain deductions, your state taxable income could be higher than your federal taxable income. Review state rules before filing.
Depreciation and Refinancing
Refinancing does not reset depreciation. Your depreciation schedule continues based on the original building basis plus any new capital improvements. If you pull cash out, the cash itself is not taxable, but it also does not increase depreciation unless you use it for qualifying improvements.
Common Mistakes and Audit Risks
- Depreciating land value
- Forgetting to start depreciation
- Using the wrong recovery period
- Claiming depreciation on personal-use property
- Ignoring depreciation recapture when selling
FAQs
Do I have to take depreciation?
Yes. The IRS treats depreciation as claimed even if you do not take it, which can hurt you later.
Can depreciation reduce my tax below zero?
Depreciation can create a loss, but passive activity limits may prevent you from using it all in the current year.
Does depreciation affect state taxes?
State rules vary. Some states do not follow federal depreciation rules.
Updated for 2026: What to Watch
For 2026, pay attention to:
- Changes to bonus depreciation rules
- State conformity to federal depreciation
- IRS guidance on cost segregation
Change Log
- 2026-02-14: Initial 2026 edition with step-by-step tax shield math.
Sources: IRS Publication 527, IRS MACRS guidance, Schedule E instructions.