Learn how sophisticated investors use cost segregation to reduce taxable income, improve cash flow, and optimize real estate returns in 2026.
In today’s market environment, improving returns is no longer just about finding better deals it’s about structuring investments more efficiently. Cost segregation is one of the most underutilized strategies in real estate. When applied correctly, it allows investors to accelerate depreciation, reduce taxable income, and improve near-term cash flow.
For many high-income investors, this can result in meaningful tax savings without changing the underlying investment.
This webinar will break down how the strategy works, where it applies, and how it fits into a broader investment approach.
Min. Target IRR
Assets
States
Beds
How Cost Segregation Works
Understand how properties are broken into components to accelerate depreciation..How Much You Can Potentially Save
See real-world examples of how cost segregation impacts taxable income.Who Should Use It (And Who Should Not)
Learn which investor profiles benefit most from this strategy.Bonus Depreciation & 2026 Changes
Understand how current tax rules affect your investment decisions.Common Mistakes to Avoid
Avoid costly errors that reduce the effectiveness of cost segregation.How It Fits Into Your Investment Strategy
Learn how sophisticated investors integrate tax strategy into deal structuring.Finding a good deal is important-but what you keep after taxes matters just as much. We’ve found that many investors either don’t use strategies like cost segregation or they use them without fully understanding when they make sense.
This session is meant to simplify that. We’ll walk through how it works, where it fits, and how investors are thinking about it today-so you can make more confident decisions going forward.
Cost segregation is a tax strategy that allows real estate investors to break a property into different components and depreciate some of them faster, which can reduce taxable income.
No. This webinar is helpful whether you already own property or are planning your next investment. Understanding this strategy early can help you structure deals more efficiently.
Not always. It tends to be more useful for investors with higher taxable income or larger deals, but it depends on your specific situation.
No. While larger investors often benefit more, many individual investors also use cost segregation-it just needs to be evaluated properly.
No. We’ll keep it simple and practical, focusing on real examples instead of complex tax language.