Arkansas is a market with two overlapping cost segregation opportunities: a growing NW Arkansas commercial and multifamily sector generating strong demand for current-year studies, and a statewide inventory of older investment properties held under the standard 39-year schedule for years or decades, representing some of the strongest lookback study candidates.
Arkansas’s combination of lower median property values, a recently reduced income tax rate, and its older housing stock makes cost segregation here worth understanding, regardless of how long you have held the property.
The guide covers what cost segregation is, which Arkansas properties qualify, how the study process works, what it costs relative to what it returns, and how to evaluate providers.
TL;DR: What Arkansas Property Owners Need to Know About Cost Segregation
- ●Engineering-based reclassification: Cost segregation is an IRS-approved engineering analysis that reclassifies building components from 27.5-year or 39-year schedules onto 5-year, 7-year, or 15-year schedules, front-loading deductions into the first five years.
- ●Declining state income tax rate: Arkansas’s top individual income tax rate is 3.9% for 2025 (3.7% from 2026), with a pending conformity change that could mean accelerated deductions reduce both the federal and state bill simultaneously (confirm with your CPA).
- ●Older housing stock and logistics-driven commercial: Arkansas’s older housing stock (median build year approximately 1982) and its logistics-driven commercial sector create strong conditions for both current-year studies and lookback studies on older properties.
- ●Strong study ROI at modest property values: A $300,000 Arkansas rental property with 28% reclassification can generate approximately 10x the study fee in first-year tax savings when state and federal savings are both applicable.
- ●Lookback studies available on all post-1986 properties: Any property placed in service after 1986 is eligible for a lookback study via Form 3115, capturing all missed accelerated depreciation in the current tax year with no amended returns required.
What Arkansas Property Owners Should Know About Cost Segregation
How Standard Depreciation Compares to Cost Segregation
Under standard IRS rules, described in IRS Publication 946, the entire building depreciates as a single unit. A $500,000 Arkansas residential rental generates roughly $18,181 per year in deductions spread across 27.5 years. For a plain-language overview, cost segregation for dummies covers the foundational mechanics.
The Three Depreciation Categories That Drive Savings
Components move from the building-level schedule into three shorter buckets. For older Arkansas properties, HVAC systems, plumbing fixtures, and interior finishes are strong candidates for reclassification.
| Component | Standard Life | Cost Segregation Life |
|---|---|---|
| Carpeting, vinyl flooring, wall coverings | 27.5 or 39 years | 5 years |
| Appliances and specialty fixtures | 27.5 or 39 years | 5 years |
| HVAC systems, plumbing fixtures | 39 years | 5 to 7 years |
| Office and retail case fixtures | 39 years | 7 years |
| Parking paving, driveways | 39 years | 15 years |
| Landscaping, fencing, exterior lighting | 39 years | 15 years |
| Structural walls, foundation, roof | 27.5 or 39 years | No change |
Arkansas Real Estate and Why Cost Segregation Fits So Well
Arkansas combines three conditions that make cost segregation unusually efficient: recent income tax rate cuts (3.9% in 2025, 3.7% from 2026), lower median property values that improve study ROI, and older housing stock with significant catch-up potential.
A Growing Market Built for Investment
The NW Arkansas corridor (Bentonville, Rogers, Fayetteville) has seen sustained demand growth anchored by Walmart’s headquarters and its supplier network.
Multifamily and STR construction in that corridor, alongside commercial markets in Little Rock, Fort Smith, and Jonesboro, means Arkansas investors are increasingly acquiring properties where a current-year study captures the maximum benefit.
Older Housing Stock and the Catch-Up Opportunity
What we find in Arkansas’s investment property market is a disproportionate share of properties acquired before owners understood cost segregation as an option.
With a median residential build year of approximately 1982, much of the state’s rental stock has been depreciating under the standard schedule for decades. Lookback studies via Form 3115 allow owners to claim all of that missed accelerated depreciation in a single current-year deduction with no amended returns required.
Low Property Values, High Study ROI
Arkansas’s relatively low property values (well below the national median) mean study fees represent a smaller proportion of potential savings than in higher-value markets.
A $300,000 Arkansas rental with 28% reclassification and 100% bonus depreciation can generate approximately 10x the cost of the study in first-year combined savings, assuming state-level savings are applicable.
Which Arkansas Properties Qualify for a Cost Segregation Study
Most income-producing real property qualifies. Seneca’s mobile home park case study shows how reclassification works on residential-adjacent property types.
Reclassification ranges are illustrative estimates. Actual percentages vary by construction, age, and component mix. Confirm with your CPA.
| Property Type | Qualifies | Typical Reclassification Range |
|---|---|---|
| Single-family rental | Yes | 20 to 30% |
| Multifamily (2 to 4 units) | Yes | 20 to 28% |
| Short-term rental / Ozark cabin | Yes | 25 to 40% |
| Agricultural storage facility | Yes | 20 to 30% |
| Office and retail building | Yes | 20 to 35% |
| Warehouse / logistics facility | Yes | 20 to 35% |
| Restaurant or hotel | Yes | 25 to 40% |
| Mobile home park | Yes | 15 to 25% |
| Primary residence | No | N/A |
| Vacant land | No | N/A |
Residential Rentals, Multifamily, and Short-Term Rentals
Single-family rentals, duplexes, fourplexes, apartment complexes, and short-term rentals, including vacation cabins near Ozark National Forest, all qualify when used for investment purposes.
STR properties often reclassify at higher rates because appliances, furnishings, and specialty finishes qualify as personal property; most firms require a depreciable basis above $200,000 to $250,000 for a clear return.
Commercial, Industrial, and Owner-Occupied Buildings
Office buildings, retail spaces, warehouses, distribution facilities, restaurants, hotels, and owner-occupied commercial properties all qualify.
Commercial properties depreciate over 39 years under the standard schedule, making the front-loading benefit proportionally larger than for residential, and Arkansas’s logistics sector (Walmart suppliers, regional distribution) represents a natural concentration of qualifying assets.
Renovation and Lookback Study Eligibility
Properties placed in service since 1987 are eligible for lookback studies, and significant renovations create a separate cost segregation opportunity on the improvement costs; both are captured through Form 3115 in the current tax year.
The Tax Advantages of Cost Segregation in Arkansas
Cost segregation time-shifts deductions to maximize their present value.
For Arkansas owners, that means larger deductions earlier, against a state income tax that has been declining.
Federal Depreciation Acceleration and Cash Flow
Front-loaded deductions in years one through five reduce federal taxable income when the reinvestment opportunity is highest.
Using a $400,000 Arkansas rental with 28% reclassification:
| Metric | Standard Depreciation | Cost Segregation + 100% Bonus |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 deduction | ~$14,500 | ~$122,000 |
| Years 1 to 5 cumulative | ~$73,000 | ~$164,000 |
| Year 1 tax savings (37% federal) | ~$5,400 | ~$41,000 |
Illustrative estimates based on a $400,000 residential rental, 28% reclassification, 100% federal bonus depreciation. Confirm with your CPA before making financial decisions.
How Arkansas State Tax Conformity Amplifies the Savings
Arkansas’s state income tax rate for 2025 is 3.9%, reduced from prior years, with a further cut to 3.7% effective January 1, 2026. Arkansas has historically decoupled from federal bonus depreciation under §168(k), but HB1501 (2025 session) proposed adopting the 2024 federal bonus rate for tax years beginning January 1, 2025.
You should confirm the current conformity status with their CPA; if confirmed, state savings are at 3.9% compound on top of the federal benefit, unlike non-conforming states such as California.
Bonus Depreciation Under Current Federal Law
The One Big Beautiful Bill (P.L. 119-21, signed July 4, 2025) permanently restored 100% federal bonus depreciation for qualifying property acquired and placed in service after January 19, 2025, per IRS Notice 2026-11.
All reclassified 5-year and 15-year components can be deducted in the acquisition year rather than over their recovery periods. For properties acquired before January 19, 2025: 40% applies to the January 1 to January 19, 2025 window; 60% for 2024 acquisitions.
How a Cost Segregation Study Works From Start to Finish
A cost segregation study is an engineering-based analysis; the quality of documentation determines IRS defensibility. Studies can be completed remotely via virtual site visits.
At Seneca, here is what the process looks like for Arkansas properties:
Step 1: Feasibility and Initial Savings Estimate
We start with a no-cost review using property type, acquisition price, square footage, and build year to estimate the reclassifiable basis.
If projected year-one savings exceed the study fee by at least 5x, the study makes financial sense; Seneca provides this estimate before any commitment is required.
Step 2: Engineering Analysis and Component Classification
Our engineers work through construction documents, site plans, and specifications to classify each component against the IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide standard.
Engineering-based studies produce component-level documentation significantly more defensible than residual estimation methods.
Step 3: Report Delivery and CPA Coordination
The final report includes a component-by-component breakdown, supporting documentation, depreciation schedules, and reconciliation with the original tax basis. The owner’s CPA applies the findings to the tax return, and audit defense is included with every quality study.
The turnaround time for most Arkansas residential and standard commercial studies is 2 to 4 weeks.
Seneca Cost Segregation is an engineering firm that transforms the way real estate investors approach taxes, turning long depreciation schedules into immediate, IRS-approved deductions.
Our nationwide team handles the entire process, from site visit to fixed asset schedule, with a money-back audit defense guarantee included.
Request a free proposal and find out how much of your tax burden can be legally reduced this year.
The Cost and ROI of Cost Segregation Studies in Arkansas
The right question is not what a cost segregation study costs but what it returns relative to that cost.
The main drivers are property type, square footage, component complexity, property age, and documentation quality. Residential studies generally cost less than commercial ones due to lower complexity.
Engineering-based studies cost more than residual methods and produce more defensible results; Seneca provides a no-cost preliminary estimate so owners know the projected ROI before committing.
A Sample ROI Breakdown for an Arkansas Rental Property
The table below illustrates the math on a $400,000 Arkansas long-term rental with 28% reclassification and 100% federal bonus depreciation applied:
| Metric | Result |
|---|---|
| Property value | $400,000 |
| Reclassified basis at 28% | $112,000 |
| Year 1 deduction (100% bonus + remaining standard) | ~$122,000 |
| Federal tax savings at 37% | ~$41,000 |
| Arkansas state savings at 3.9% (subject to conformity) | ~$4,400 |
| Estimated study fee | ~$4,000 |
| Net year 1 benefit (federal + state) | ~$41,400 |
| Year 1 return on study fee | ~11x |
State-level savings depend on Arkansas’s bonus depreciation conformity status. Confirm with your CPA before modeling state savings. Figures are illustrative estimates. Actual results vary by property and tax situation.
What to Look for in an Arkansas Cost Segregation Provider
For Arkansas owners ready to evaluate providers, five criteria separate quality studies from studies that create risk. See the top cost segregation companies for a broader comparison.
| Criterion | Why It Matters for Arkansas Properties |
|---|---|
| Engineering-based methodology | Component-level documentation required for IRS-defensible results |
| Audit defense included | Standard at quality firms; protects findings under IRS review at no extra cost |
| Fixed, transparent fee structure | Enables ROI calculation before committing to a study |
| Virtual site capability | Arkansas properties span urban NW Arkansas to rural rental markets statewide |
| CPA collaboration process | Study findings must integrate cleanly into the owner’s tax return |
Seneca provides national coverage, including all Arkansas markets, handles virtual inspections for rural properties, and offers a no-cost preliminary estimate before any commitment.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Here are answers to the most common questions Arkansas property owners ask about cost segregation:
How Long Does a Cost Segregation Study Typically Take?
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Most engineering-based studies are completed in two to four weeks after documentation collection.
Some firms offer expedited timelines for owners facing a tax filing deadline.
What Documents Are Needed to Start a Cost Segregation Study?
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The standard documents are a purchase agreement or settlement statement, construction drawings or blueprints if available, a recent appraisal, and any renovation records.
Missing documents are common; experienced firms work with whatever exists. Use Seneca’s cost segregation calculator to model savings before pulling together the documentation.
Do I Need to Be a High-Income Investor to Benefit From Cost Segregation?
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Income level matters less than whether the investor has meaningful federal tax liability.
Passive activity loss rules can limit how quickly passive investors can use deductions; a CPA review of PAL status is the right first step before commissioning a study.
Is Cost Segregation Worth It for Lower-Value Arkansas Properties?
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Arkansas’s low median property values actually improve study ROI, because the same reclassification rates produce meaningful dollar savings even at moderate property values.
A depreciable building basis above $200,000 to $250,000 is typically where study fees produce a clear return.
When Should Arkansas Property Owners Commission a Cost Segregation Study?
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The best time is the same tax year the property is acquired, renovated, or placed in service.
Owners of older properties still benefit through a lookback study; acting sooner captures more deductions during years when reinvestment opportunity is highest.
Conclusion
Cost segregation in Arkansas is an underused federal strategy that fits this state well: lower median property values produce a strong study ROI, older housing stock creates significant lookback opportunities, and a declining state income tax rate means confirmed state-level savings compound on top of the federal benefit.
For owners in NW Arkansas’s growing market and across the state’s existing rental and commercial inventory, the case for running the preliminary math is clear.
At Seneca Cost Segregation, our engineering team has completed over 10,200 studies and has 12+ years of experience helping real estate investors reduce taxable income across all 50 states.
On average, our clients capture $171,243 in first-year deductions alone, money that goes back to work in their portfolio, not toward a slow depreciation schedule. A full audit defense guarantee is included with every study.
Your property may be holding deductions you have never touched. Contact our team to find out what you have been missing.
