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Cost Segregation · Missouri

Cost Segregation Study in Missouri for Airbnb and Short-Term Rental Investors

Missouri is one of the more favorable states in the country for cost segregation because it uses rolling conformity to the Internal Revenue Code: when federal bonus depreciation changes, Missouri's individual income tax follows automatically, without a separate add-back or a slower state depreciation schedule.

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Missouri is one of the more favorable states in the country for cost segregation because it uses rolling conformity to the Internal Revenue Code: when federal bonus depreciation changes, Missouri's individual income tax follows automatically, without a separate add-back or a slower state depreciation schedule. As of this writing in 2026, that remains the law, though state legislatures nationwide — including Missouri's — can revisit conformity to federal bonus depreciation in any future session, so this is a point worth reconfirming before you file. Combine current conformity with a below-average statewide property tax burden and destination rental markets around Branson, the Lake of the Ozarks, Table Rock Lake, St. Louis, and Kansas City, and Missouri rental owners are positioned to capture the full value of an accelerated depreciation study on both their federal and state returns in the same year.

Apex Reserve Group, based in Irvine, California, prepares engineering-based cost segregation studies for real estate investors nationwide, including short-term rental and long-term rental owners throughout Missouri. This page is general educational information, not tax or legal advice — every property and ownership structure is different, so confirm the specifics of your situation with a qualified CPA or tax attorney before filing.

Why Cost Segregation Pays Off in Missouri

Missouri's individual income tax statute (Mo. Rev. Stat. §143.091) defines Missouri adjusted gross income by starting from federal adjusted gross income and adopting the Internal Revenue Code as currently in effect — a rolling conformity approach. Missouri's own depreciation add-back, found at §143.121.3(7) RSMo (enacted by 2002 Senate Bill 1248 and historically referenced as §143.121(c)), is narrow: it applies only to the difference between pre- and post-Job Creation and Worker Assistance Act bonus depreciation on property placed in service between July 1, 2002 and June 30, 2003, a window that has no bearing on property acquired today. That means the 100% bonus depreciation Congress restored under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act flows through directly to a Missouri owner's state return the same year it is claimed federally, with no separate state add-back and no multi-year spread to track — this is the current law as of 2026, though it depends on Missouri not enacting a new decoupling provision in a future legislative session, so confirm current-year status with a CPA before filing. For a pass-through owner in Missouri's top individual bracket, currently 4.7% for the 2025–2026 tax year (scheduled to step down toward 4.5% as revenue triggers are met — verify the current-year rate against Missouri DOR's published table), that state-level conformity is real, immediate money on top of the federal benefit.

Property taxes reinforce the case for accelerating deductions rather than deferring them. Estimates of Missouri's statewide average effective property tax rate vary by data provider: one aggregator, propertytaxrates.org, places it around 0.88% against a 0.91% national average, while other rankings (such as SmartAsset's ATTOM-based figures) put Missouri closer to 0.85% against a roughly 0.92% national figure. Sources generally agree Missouri sits modestly below the national average, but the exact percentage depends on the methodology and year, and rates vary widely by county — from under 0.4% in some rural counties to over 1.1% in St. Louis County. A comparatively modest, front-loaded property tax bill means Missouri investors keep more of the cash a cost segregation study frees up in year one, which is exactly when it's most useful for reinvestment, debt paydown, or covering the down payment on the next acquisition.

Because Missouri does not currently decouple from federal bonus depreciation for individuals, the analysis here is simpler than in states that require an add-back and multi-year recovery: the reclassification a cost segregation study produces under Section 168(k) is generally usable for Missouri purposes in the same tax year it's usable federally, subject to your specific facts and to Missouri's conformity status remaining unchanged.

How a Cost Segregation Study Works

Left alone, the IRS default is to depreciate an entire residential rental building on a straight-line schedule over 27.5 years (39 years for commercial property), which spreads out the tax benefit of the purchase price about as slowly as the tax code allows. A cost segregation study is an engineering-based analysis that walks the property component by component — flooring, cabinetry, decking, appliances, specialty electrical and plumbing, exterior improvements such as fencing, patios, and irrigation — and reassigns each piece to the shorter recovery period the IRS already allows for it under existing cost-recovery rules, typically 5, 7, or 15 years rather than 27.5 or 39.

The reason this matters more in 2026 than it did a few years ago is the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed into law on July 4, 2025, which permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation for qualifying property acquired and placed in service after January 19, 2025. Under current law, components identified with a recovery period of 20 years or less can generally be deducted in full in the year they're placed in service rather than depreciated gradually — turning a study's findings into an immediate, first-year deduction instead of a multi-decade trickle.

A Missouri Cost Segregation Example

For illustration only — your results depend on your property and tax situation, and this is not a projection of actual savings.

Suppose an investor buys a furnished lake house at the Lake of the Ozarks for $650,000, allocating roughly $150,000 to land (non-depreciable) and $500,000 to the structure and its contents. Under standard straight-line depreciation, that $500,000 would be written off over 27.5 years — about $18,000 per year. A cost segregation study might reasonably identify 25–30% of that basis, or roughly $125,000–$150,000, as dock components, decking, furnishings, appliances, flooring, and specialty electrical that qualify for 5-, 7-, or 15-year treatment. Under current 100% bonus depreciation rules, that reclassified amount could potentially be deducted in the acquisition year rather than over decades — a materially different first-year tax position, though the actual figures depend entirely on the property's components, purchase allocation, and the owner's individual tax circumstances.

Already Own Your Missouri Property? The Look-Back Study

Investors sometimes assume cost segregation only works for a property bought this year, but that isn't the case. If you've owned a Missouri rental for several years without a study, a "look-back" cost segregation study can still capture the missed acceleration. Rather than filing amended returns for each prior year, the mechanism is a Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method, which allows the accumulated difference between what was actually depreciated and what should have been depreciated under proper component classification to be claimed as a single Section 481(a) catch-up adjustment in the current tax year. For an owner who has held a Branson or St. Louis-area rental for five or ten years, that catch-up can represent a substantial one-time deduction — worth evaluating regardless of when the property was originally purchased.

Who Should Consider Cost Segregation in Missouri

  • Short-term rental and Airbnb hosts in Missouri's established vacation markets, including Branson, the Lake of the Ozarks, Table Rock Lake, and Hermann's wine country
  • Long-term rental and multifamily owners in St. Louis, Kansas City, Springfield, and Columbia looking to improve after-tax cash flow
  • Recent buyers or renovators who purchased or substantially improved a Missouri rental property within the last year and want to capture bonus depreciation while it's fully in effect
  • High-income W-2 earners or business owners exploring the short-term rental material participation strategy, where average guest stays of 7 days or less can allow rental losses accelerated by cost segregation to offset active income, subject to material participation and other IRS requirements
  • Owners of older Missouri properties who have never had a component-level depreciation analysis performed and may qualify for a look-back study

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FAQs

Missouri questions, answered.

Does Missouri conform to federal bonus depreciation?

As of 2026, yes. Missouri uses rolling conformity to the Internal Revenue Code for individual income tax purposes under Mo. Rev. Stat. §143.091, meaning it automatically adopts current federal depreciation rules, including bonus depreciation under Section 168(k), without requiring a separate state election. Missouri's only bonus-depreciation add-back, at §143.121.3(7) RSMo, applies to a narrow window of property placed in service between July 1, 2002 and June 30, 2003, which does not affect current acquisitions. As a result, the 100% bonus depreciation restored by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act for property acquired after January 19, 2025 generally applies for Missouri state income tax purposes in the same year it applies federally, subject to your individual facts. State conformity can change through future legislative action, so confirm the current-year status with a CPA.

Is cost segregation worth it for a Missouri short-term rental?

It's frequently worth evaluating, especially for higher-value furnished properties in markets like the Lake of the Ozarks or Branson, where a large share of the purchase price is tied up in fixtures, furnishings, decking, and site improvements that a study can reclassify into shorter recovery periods. Because Missouri currently conforms to federal bonus depreciation, the accelerated deduction generally benefits both your federal and state tax position in the same year. Whether it's worthwhile for your specific property depends on your basis, income situation, and how long you plan to hold — a feasibility analysis is the right first step.

I already own my Missouri rental property — can I still do a cost segregation study?

Yes. A look-back study can be performed on a property you've owned for years. Instead of amending prior-year tax returns, the missed depreciation is captured through a Form 3115 accounting method change and claimed as a single Section 481(a) catch-up adjustment on your current-year return, so you don't need to reopen closed tax years to benefit.

What is the short-term rental material participation strategy, and does it work in Missouri?

It's a federal tax strategy, not a Missouri-specific one, so it applies the same way to a Missouri property as it would anywhere else. If a rental has an average guest stay of 7 days or less and the owner materially participates in operating it under IRS rules, the activity can be treated as a trade or business rather than a passive rental, which may allow losses accelerated by cost segregation to offset other active or W-2 income. The material participation tests are fact-specific, so this strategy should be reviewed with a CPA familiar with short-term rental taxation before you rely on it.

How much can I save with a cost segregation study on my Missouri property?

There's no fixed percentage or dollar figure that applies to every property — the outcome depends on your purchase price, land-to-building allocation, the mix of components in the property, your income and tax bracket, and current depreciation law. Illustrative examples on this page (such as the Lake of the Ozarks scenario) are meant to show how the mechanics work, not to project your results. A feasibility analysis specific to your property, followed by review with a qualified CPA or tax attorney, is the reliable way to estimate your potential benefit.