Delaware’s combination of no sales tax, low property taxes, and a corporate-friendly incorporation environment makes it one of the most investor-oriented tax jurisdictions in the country.
What most Delaware property owners have not applied is the strategy that unlocks the largest available income tax reduction on real estate: cost segregation in Delaware, which accelerates depreciation of building components from the standard 27.5- or 39-year schedule to 5-, 7-, and 15-year categories.
The state’s property taxes are low (0.53 percent effective rate, fifth lowest nationally), which means income tax is the primary tax lever for Delaware real estate investors.
Cost segregation targets that directly. The federal savings are simple to model.
The Delaware state interaction has a specific nuance that competitors either misstate or avoid, and one we flag for every Delaware client before we file. Both are covered below.
Why Delaware Property Owners Use Cost Segregation
Cost segregation examples from the Delaware market illustrate cost segregation in real estate terms clearly.
The table below maps common Delaware property components to the difference between standard and accelerated depreciation schedules:
| Component Type | Standard Schedule | Accelerated Schedule | Delaware Property Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Specialty electrical systems | 39 years | 5 to 7 years | Wilmington corporate office buildout |
| Parking area surface | 39 years | 15 years | Newark commercial parking lot |
| Interior specialty flooring | 39 years | 5 years | Rehoboth Beach vacation rental |
| Landscaping and site lighting | 39 years | 15 years | Sussex County residential complex |
| Data and cabling infrastructure | 39 years | 5 years | Dover healthcare facility |
Cost segregation explained in financial terms: the same total deduction is available either way.
Accelerated depreciation changes when that deduction occurs, concentrating the largest write-offs in the early years of ownership when reinvestment capital matters most.
What Standard Depreciation Costs Delaware Property Owners Each Year
Without a study, a Delaware investor’s entire depreciable basis is written off on one long schedule. A $450,000 depreciable basis on a Wilmington commercial building at 39 years yields roughly $11,538 in depreciation deductions each year, the same modest amount for nearly four decades.
How does cost segregation work on that same property: reclassifying 30 percent of that basis ($135,000) into 5-year and 15-year categories concentrates deductions on that portion dramatically in Year 1. Combined with the other 70 percent continuing on the 39-year schedule, the total Year 1 deduction is roughly $147,923, more than twelve times the standard $11,538.
That difference compounds across a portfolio and across years of ownership.
How Cost Segregation Studies Work in Delaware
Seneca Cost Segregation is a nationwide engineering firm specializing in cost segregation studies that help property owners legally reduce their tax burden and improve cash flow.
Here is how our process works:
Step 1: Property Assessment and Component Identification
An engineering-based assessment is the IRS’s preferred methodology for cost segregation studies, and it is the standard Seneca applies to every Delaware engagement.
Our engineer reviews blueprints, construction documents, and site photographs, then conducts a physical or virtual walkthrough of the Delaware property. Commercial properties in Wilmington’s financial district, multifamily buildings near Dover Air Force Base, and coastal STR properties in Rehoboth and Lewes all follow the same process.
The Delaware market context shapes what components are found, not how they are identified.
Step 2: Reclassification, Report Delivery, and CPA Filing
Once the inspection is complete, each identified component is assigned to its correct MACRS recovery period and compiled into a formal cost segregation report.
A cost segregation report for a Delaware commercial property includes an itemized component schedule, cost allocations by asset category, updated depreciation schedules, and projected tax savings formatted for the CPA’s direct use on the return. For a look at what a complete, audit-ready deliverable looks like, see a real cost segregation study example.
The CPA implements the revised depreciation schedule on the current-year return. For Delaware properties already owned without a prior study, Form 3115 (Change in Accounting Method) files the catch-up adjustment in the current year, no amended returns required.
This streamlined process and audit defense guarantee mean you get maximum savings with zero guesswork.
Request a free proposal and find out how much of your tax bill you have been leaving on the table.
How Bonus Depreciation Works With Cost Segregation in Delaware
This section covers the specific Delaware state question that competitors either misstate or avoid. The answer matters for how Delaware investors should model their total savings.
Delaware’s Approach to Federal Bonus Depreciation
Delaware does not fully conform to the OBBB’s restoration of 100 percent bonus depreciation.
Under Delaware House Bill 255, effective November 19, 2025, Delaware applies the federal bonus depreciation rules under I.R.C. §168(k) as they existed immediately before the OBBB’s enactment for qualifying property placed in service after January 19, 2025, and before January 1, 2031. In practical terms, this means Delaware uses the prior TCJA phase-out schedule rather than the restored 100 percent rate.
What this is not: a complete decoupling from bonus depreciation. Delaware still allows bonus depreciation at the state level. What it is: a refusal to adopt the OBBB’s 100 percent rate, instead applying the TCJA schedule that was in effect before the OBBB changed it.
In practice, this distinction trips up investors who assume their Delaware state return mirrors the federal return exactly. We see it consistently when coordinating with CPAs on Delaware filings: the state savings are real, but the Year 1 concentration is different from what the federal return shows. Modeling both before filing is the right move.
Federal Savings vs. Delaware State Savings
The table below compares federal and Delaware state first-year savings on a $600,000 commercial building in Wilmington. Figures assume 30 percent reclassification, 15 percent land exclusion, and a 37 percent federal / 6.6 percent Delaware individual rate.
Delaware bonus depreciation is modeled at the pre-OBBB rate for 2025.
| Treatment | Federal Treatment | Delaware State Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Qualifying bonus depreciation rate | 100% (OBBB, post-Jan 19, 2025) | Pre-OBBB rate (TCJA schedule) |
| Reclassified basis ($153,000 at 30%) | $153,000 fully expensed Year 1 | $61,200 expensed Year 1 (40%); remainder spread over MACRS |
| Year 1 additional deduction vs. standard | ~$149,000 | ~$50,000 to $55,000 |
| Additional tax savings Year 1 | ~$55,000 at 37% | ~$3,300 to $3,600 at 6.6% |
| Total combined Year 1 additional savings | ~$58,000 to $59,000 combined federal plus Delaware state | |
The federal benefit is the dominant component for most Delaware investors. The Delaware state benefit still exists and accumulates meaningfully over the full MACRS recovery period.
The state deductions are not lost; they are spread across more years.
Delaware’s Property Tax Rate in Context
Delaware’s 0.53 percent effective property tax rate is the fifth lowest in the country. On a $300,000 residential rental, the annual property tax bill is roughly $1,590, a minimal annual tax relief compared to what cost segregation delivers through income tax savings.
The practical implication: in higher-property-tax states, property taxes provide a meaningful annual deduction regardless of depreciation strategy.
In Delaware, they do not. Income tax savings from accelerated depreciation carry proportionally more weight for improving the overall tax economics of a Delaware real estate investment.
The Financial Returns of Cost Segregation in Delaware
A cost segregation study in Delaware offers significant financial benefits.
Cash Flow Improvements in the First Years of Ownership
Front-loaded federal depreciation reduces taxable income in the years when reinvestment capital matters most. On the $600,000 Wilmington commercial example, the additional ~$55,000 in Year 1 federal tax savings from a cost segregation study is capital that can be applied to debt reduction, property improvements, or the down payment on a second Delaware investment.
Is cost segregation worth it for a Delaware commercial property? The right first step is asking that question for your specific property.
When is cost segregation worth it? The answer depends on the depreciable basis, asset composition, applicable tax rates, and planned hold period. When those factors align, the study fee is typically recovered many times over in Year 1 alone.
A Sample Delaware Property: Savings Breakdown
The table below models a realistic Delaware multifamily acquisition in the $400,000 to $600,000 range. Figures are illustrative estimates. Confirm all projections with your CPA.
| Line Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | $500,000 |
| Land value (excluded, ~15%) | $75,000 |
| Depreciable basis | $425,000 |
| Reclassification rate (est. 28%) | $119,000 in short-life components |
| Standard Year 1 deduction (27.5-year residential) | $15,455 |
| With cost segregation + 100% federal bonus dep | $132,891 |
| Additional federal Year 1 deduction | ~$117,436 |
| Additional federal tax savings at 37% | ~$43,451 |
| Additional Delaware state savings (Year 1 + spread) | ~$1,500 to $2,000 Year 1 + additional in subsequent years |
The federal benefit accrues in Year 1. The Delaware state benefit accumulates across the recovery period.
Both are real, and neither disappears; the state benefit is spread differently, not eliminated.
Look-Back Studies for Properties You Already Own
Delaware investors who acquired properties without commissioning a cost segregation study can still capture all accumulated missed accelerated depreciation retroactively. Form 3115 applies the catch-up as a single current-year deduction; no amended returns required.
The IRS allows look-back studies on properties placed in service as far back as 1987.
For a Delaware investor who purchased a $1 million commercial building in 2018 without a study and has been depreciating on the 39-year schedule since, the accumulated federal catch-up can represent $150,000 or more available in the current filing year.
Delaware Properties Best Suited for Cost Segregation
Most income-producing Delaware properties with a depreciable basis above $150,000 to $200,000 for residential and $1,000,000 for commercial are viable cost segregation candidates.
Properties with higher concentrations of personal property and site improvements produce stronger results.
Office and Commercial Buildings in Wilmington and Newark
Wilmington’s financial district and corporate headquarters concentration support a large base of qualifying commercial real estate. Newark’s proximity to the University of Delaware adds office, retail, and multifamily inventory to the mix.
Cost segregation services in Delaware for commercial properties focus primarily on the personal property density that makes those buildings function: specialized electrical systems, IT and cabling infrastructure, HVAC distribution serving specific tenant uses, and common-area finishes.
Cost segregation in real estate analysis for commercial Delaware properties typically produces reclassification rates of 20 to 30 percent of the depreciable basis.
Coastal Vacation Rentals Along the Delaware Shore
Rehoboth Beach, Lewes, Bethany Beach, and Dewey Beach host a high-value short-term rental market where property values are well above the Delaware average. High-value coastal properties with decks, outdoor amenities, landscaping, and purpose-built seasonal infrastructure often see reclassification rates of 22 to 35 percent.
Cost segregation for rental properties follows the same IRS rules in the coastal market as anywhere else, with site improvements, including parking, exterior lighting, landscaping, and outdoor amenity structures, all qualifying for the 15-year land improvement schedule.
What we find working with Delaware beach rental owners is that the outdoor component pool is often larger than expected: decks, pergolas, exterior lighting systems, and hardscaping add up quickly on properties where outdoor livability drives the rental rate.
For STR operators, the federal benefit is available regardless of Delaware’s state bonus depreciation position. Federal bonus depreciation on reclassified components applies to Delaware beach rental owners at the full 100 percent rate for qualifying property placed in service after January 19, 2025.
The state return handles the Delaware portion differently, but the federal savings are unaffected.
Multifamily Residential Buildings
Apartment buildings, duplexes, and small multifamily properties in Wilmington, Dover, and the communities surrounding Dover Air Force Base default to the 27.5-year residential schedule.
Component reclassification is especially impactful for residential rentals because the starting depreciation rate is already better than the 39-year commercial schedule, and accelerating deductions further produces meaningful Year 1 results even on modest-sized residential investments.
What a Cost Segregation Study Costs in Delaware
Most engineering-based Delaware cost segregation studies run from $5,000 to $15,000, depending on property size, the number of structures, building system complexity, and whether it is a new study or a look-back requiring cost reconstruction.
Full context on what drives study pricing is on the page explaining how much a cost segregation study costs.
Factors That Determine Study Pricing
| Pricing Factor | Lower Fee Range | Higher Fee Range |
|---|---|---|
| Property value | Under $1,000,000 | $3,000,000+ |
| Square footage | Under 10,000 sq ft | 50,000+ sq ft |
| Number of structures | Single building | Multiple buildings or parcels |
| System complexity | Standard commercial systems | Specialized medical, industrial, or process-driven systems |
| Study type | New acquisition (current records) | Look-back (partial or missing records) |
The ROI Test Before You Commit
The simple payback ratio is: estimated first-year federal tax savings divided by the study fee. For most Delaware commercial properties above $1,000,000 in depreciable cost basis, that ratio is well above the 10-to-1 benchmark that signals a worthwhile engagement.
A free savings estimate from a qualified firm provides that projection before any commitment is required. The estimate is the right first step before any decision to proceed.
What to Know Before Starting a Cost Segregation Study in Delaware
Certain factors affect the outcome of the cost segregation study.
Depreciation Recapture at the Time of Sale
Accelerated depreciation deductions are subject to recapture when the property is sold. Personal property deductions (5-year and 7-year components from cost segregation) are recaptured at ordinary income rates under Section 1245.
Real property depreciation (15-year and 39-year components) is subject to unrecaptured Section 1250 gains at a maximum 25 percent rate, as defined in IRS Publication 946.
Recapture is a timing difference, not an additional tax. For Delaware investors, the time value of early deductions typically outweighs the recapture cost for properties held at least three to five years.
A 1031 exchange into qualifying replacement real property defers Section 1250 recapture when the sale proceeds are reinvested. Model the full hold-period net benefit with your CPA before any disposition decision.
Why the Holding Period Matters
Shorter holding periods compress the net benefit because recapture offsets a larger share of the total savings at exit. Properties held fewer than three years often see diminished returns; five or more years is where cost segregation tends to produce the strongest net outcome after recapture.
For Delaware beach rental owners with shorter seasonal holds or uncertain exit timelines, the hold-period analysis is especially important before commissioning a study.
What to Look for in a Delaware Cost Segregation Firm
The right cost segregation company for Delaware investors meets the criteria below. Study quality and audit defensibility are determined before the study begins by who is doing the work and how they are doing it.
| Green Flags | Red Flags |
|---|---|
| In-house licensed engineers on every study | Third-party or subcontracted engineers |
| Free preliminary savings estimate | No estimate until after engagement |
| Written audit defense commitment | Audit defense as an optional add-on |
| Experience with Delaware coastal STR properties | Generic national template applied to all properties |
| Report structured for CPA implementation | Deliverable that requires significant CPA rework |
| Familiarity with Delaware state bonus depreciation rules | Describes Delaware treatment incorrectly |
Every Seneca study is prepared in accordance with the IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide and the IRS ATG PDF, and backed by audit defense at no additional cost.
Seneca’s team coordinates directly with the owner’s CPA on both the federal return and the Delaware state return, including navigating the Delaware H.B. 255 bonus depreciation treatment, which we have seen described incorrectly in more than one provider’s client materials.
Frequently Asked Questions
Delaware property owners have specific questions about eligibility, state tax rules, and whether a study makes sense for their situation.
Who Qualifies for Cost Segregation in Delaware?
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Any income-producing property placed in service after 1986 with a depreciable building basis above approximately $150,000 to $200,000 for residential and $1,000,000 for commercial is a viable candidate. Qualifying property types include commercial office and retail, industrial facilities, multifamily residential, and short-term rentals.
Both new acquisitions and properties owned for several years without a prior study qualify. Look-back studies via Form 3115 apply all accumulated missed depreciation in the current tax year without amending prior returns.
What Is the Minimum Property Value for a Study to Make Financial Sense?
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The practical threshold for residential and STR properties is a depreciable basis of $150,000 to $200,000. For Delaware commercial properties, $1,000,000 in depreciable cost basis is where the study ROI is clearest.
A free savings estimate from Seneca confirms the specific numbers for any Delaware property before any commitment is made.
What Are the Downsides of Cost Segregation in Delaware?
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Two legitimate considerations: depreciation recapture at sale (addressed in the section above) and Delaware’s refusal to conform to the OBBB’s 100 percent bonus depreciation rate at the state level.
The federal benefit is unaffected by Delaware’s state position. The state benefit still exists; it is spread across more years rather than concentrated in Year 1. For most Delaware investors, the federal savings represent the majority of total benefit, and Delaware’s state treatment reduces the Year 1 combined savings rather than eliminating the state benefit entirely.
Are Delaware Beach Rentals Good Candidates for Cost Segregation?
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Yes. High-value coastal STR properties in Rehoboth Beach, Lewes, and Bethany Beach commonly show reclassification rates of 25 percent or more because of land improvements (outdoor spaces, parking, exterior lighting, landscaping) and interior personal property (specialty flooring, custom fixtures, and technology infrastructure).
A $500,000 Rehoboth Beach rental can generate meaningful Year 1 federal tax savings even at modest reclassification rates.
STR owners still capture the full 100 percent federal bonus depreciation on reclassified components regardless of Delaware’s state position. The federal return is where the majority of the benefit is realized.
How Does a Cost Segregation Study Hold Up During an IRS Audit?
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An engineering-based study with detailed asset-level documentation and cost allocations aligned with the IRS Audit Techniques Guide is well-positioned to withstand scrutiny. The quality of the underlying documentation is what makes the positions defensible, not the size of the deduction or the type of property.
Seneca backs every study with audit defense coverage, meaning we support the classifications in the report under any IRS examination at no additional cost to the client.
Conclusion
Cost segregation in Delaware delivers strong federal tax savings for commercial and residential investors. Delaware’s refusal to conform to the OBBB’s 100 percent bonus depreciation rate affects only the timing of state-level savings, not the size of the federal benefit.
With no sales tax and one of the lowest property tax rates in the country, federal income tax is the primary tax lever for Delaware real estate, and accelerated depreciation is one of the most direct ways to reduce it.
Seneca Cost Segregation prepares fully engineered studies for Delaware property owners across every property type and market, from Wilmington’s commercial corridor to the Sussex County coastline.
Every study is completed by our in-house engineering team, reviewed and signed off by our Head of Engineering, and backed by audit defense coverage at no additional charge. We have completed more than 10,200 studies with zero failed IRS audits.
Get your free Delaware cost segregation estimate and see what the numbers look like for your specific property before committing to anything.
