Cost Segregation for Refrigeration and Cold Storage Facilities [Ultimate Guide]

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Dylan Scandalios

Dylan Scandalios

Co-founder & CEO, Seneca Cost Segregation

Dylan Scandalios is the Co-founder and CEO of Seneca Cost Segregation where he has helped real estate investors save millions on their taxes. Before starting Seneca Cost Segregation, Dylan led Sales and Product teams and initiatives for multiple multi-million and multi-billion dollar companies in the United States. A real estate investor himself, Dylan Scandalios is always looking to help other investors invest in their next project faster and build a long-term moat.

Refrigeration building owners can potentially outpace standard industrial construction by 30 to 50% per square foot in cost, yet default to the same 39-year depreciation schedule, leaving glycol loop flooring, ammonia piping, blast freezer room infrastructure, and dedicated electrical on the wrong recovery class for the duration of the hold.

Cost segregation for refrigeration buildings addresses that directly: most of those systems belong on 5-year and 15-year schedules, and the IRS recognizes it.

The article below covers why refrigerated warehouses and cold storage distribution centers are among the strongest cost segregation candidates in commercial real estate, what qualifies, what the financial outcome looks like at a realistic scale, and how to run a study that holds up under IRS review.

TL;DR: What Refrigeration Facility Owners Need to Know

TL;DR — Refrigeration at a glance
  • High reclassification rates vs. dry industrial: Cold storage and refrigeration facilities typically reclassify 26 to 40% of their depreciable basis, well above the 20 to 28% standard for dry industrial warehouses, because so much of the construction cost goes into specialized systems with sub-39-year lifespans.
  • $710K deferred tax benefit on a $6M distribution center: On a $6 million refrigerated distribution center reclassifying 32% of its depreciable basis, the deferred federal tax benefit at a 37% effective rate is approximately $710,000.
  • 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored: Under permanent 100% bonus depreciation restored by the One Big Beautiful Bill (P.L. 119-21, signed July 4, 2025), owners of cold storage facilities acquired and placed in service after January 19, 2025, may deduct all reclassified assets in year one rather than over 5 to 15 years.
  • Retroactive studies via Form 3115: Older refrigeration buildings acquired as far back as 1987 remain eligible for a retroactive study via Form 3115, capturing all missed depreciation as a single catch-up deduction in the current tax year.
  • Engineering-based methodology is essential: Engineering-based methodology is required for refrigeration buildings because distinguishing process-specific refrigeration systems from structural components cannot be done with a software tool or a rule-of-thumb approach.
  • Site improvements often missed in generalist studies: Site improvements at cold storage campuses (truck courts, insulated dock doors, tire-cleaning stations) can represent 30 to 40% of all accelerated depreciation on large facilities and are frequently missed in generalist studies.

Why Refrigeration Buildings Are Built for Cost Segregation

Understanding what cost segregation is helps frame why refrigeration buildings stand out: the strategy accelerates depreciation on components with shorter functional lives, and these buildings contain more of those components per square foot than almost any other commercial property type.

Standard industrial warehouses typically see reclassification rates of 20 to 28% of their depreciable basis.

Cold storage facilities regularly reach 26 to 40%, because so much of the construction cost is tied to systems that serve the refrigeration operation rather than the structural shell.

Cold Storage vs. a Standard Warehouse

A dry warehouse has walls, a roof, a concrete slab, and basic HVAC. A cold storage facility adds insulated panels, vapor barriers, glycol loop flooring, ammonia or CO2 piping, blast freezer rooms, and dedicated electrical serving refrigeration loads.

Most of that qualifies for accelerated depreciation under IRS Publication 946 asset class rules; almost none of it exists in a standard warehouse.

Tax disclaimer: The table reflects general industry classification guidance. Actual asset treatment varies by facility and requires engineering-based analysis. Confirm with your CPA before making depreciation decisions.
Building Feature Standard Dry Warehouse Cold Storage or Refrigeration Building
Insulated wall panels No Yes, qualifies for accelerated depreciation
Specialized concrete flooring No Yes (glycol loops, vapor barriers qualify)
Refrigeration equipment and piping No Yes, typically 5-year property
Dedicated electrical for refrigeration No Yes, qualifies when purpose-specific
Standard HVAC and lighting Yes, 39-year Yes, but upgraded specs may qualify at 5 to 7 years
Exterior dock equipment Partial Yes, tire-cleaning stations, insulated dock doors qualify

The Refrigeration Assets That Drive Cost Segregation Savings

The foundational question in every cold storage cost segregation study is simple: Does this component serve the operation, or does it shelter the structure?

Components that serve the operation qualify as Section 1245 personal property and depreciate on a 5-year or 7-year schedule. Components that enclose or support the structural shell stay on the 39-year schedule.

Personal Property on 5-Year and 7-Year Schedules

What we find on refrigeration properties is that the qualifying personal property is substantial and frequently underidentified in generalist studies.

The primary categories engineers look for include:

  • Refrigeration systems: Compressors, condensers, evaporators, pumps, and embedded piping networks serving the cooling operation qualify as 5-year property.
  • Dedicated electrical: Panels, conduits, and feeders isolated to refrigeration loads qualify for accelerated treatment when they serve equipment rather than the building generally.
  • Control and monitoring systems: Automation panels, temperature sensors, and building management systems tied to refrigeration typically fall into the 5-year or 7-year class.
  • Insulated panels and zone separation: Interior wall and ceiling assemblies maintaining temperature zones are separable from the structural envelope and qualify when purpose-built for refrigeration.
  • Glycol loop flooring and vapor control: Embedded glycol distribution systems and vapor barriers below the slab are classified as 5-year property based on operational function.
  • Blast freezer room infrastructure: Cooling coils, insulated panels, and air circulation systems in a blast freezer assembly are among the highest-value qualifying assets in purpose-built freezer facilities.
  • Low-temperature lighting: Systems designed specifically for cold environments qualify based on specialized function and shorter useful life.

Site Improvements and the 15-Year Category

Cold storage campuses carry more 15-year land improvements than most commercial property types. Specialized truck court paving, insulated dock doors and dock levelers, tire-cleaning stations, refrigerated staging areas, drainage systems, exterior lighting, and landscaping all qualify for 15-year treatment.

At facilities with large outdoor operational footprints, site improvements account for 30 to 40% of all accelerated depreciation in the study.

Types of Cold Storage and Refrigeration Buildings That Benefit

Most refrigeration facility types qualify for cost segregation, with reclassification rates varying by construction complexity, system type, and building age.

For real-world comparison numbers, the cost segregation study example page provides additional context.

All reclassification percentages are illustrative estimates. Actual results depend on facility construction, system complexity, and depreciable basis. Confirm projections with your CPA before making financial decisions.

Facility Type Typical Reclassification Rate Primary Qualifying Assets
Refrigerated distribution center 26% to 35% Refrigeration equipment, dock infrastructure, specialized paving, dedicated electrical
Blast freezer facility 30% to 40% Blast freezer room systems, compressor banks, insulated panels, glycol floor systems
Multi-temperature warehouse 28% to 38% Zone separation panels, multiple refrigeration systems, vapor control flooring
Food processing plant with cold storage 30% to 45% Process cooling equipment, sanitary drainage, food-safe flooring, specialized electrical
Cold storage for pharmaceuticals or biotech 32% to 42% Temperature monitoring systems, redundant cooling, HVAC controls, specialized insulation
Agricultural cold storage (packing or shipping) 25% to 35% Hydrocooling equipment, forced-air cooling rooms, refrigeration piping, dock features

Reclassification percentages shift with construction year, system complexity, and whether the facility has undergone recent expansion.

 
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The Financial Impact of Cost Segregation on Refrigeration Properties

On a $6 million refrigerated distribution center, a cost segregation study reclassifying 32% of the depreciable basis puts $1,920,000 into 5-year and 15-year schedules.

At a 37% effective federal tax rate, the deferred tax benefit on those reclassified components is approximately $710,000, capital that would otherwise be recovered at roughly $154,000 per year over 39 years.

How Bonus Depreciation Amplifies Cold Storage Savings

Assets reclassified into 5-year or 7-year categories also qualify for bonus depreciation. Under the One Big Beautiful Bill (P.L. 119-21, signed July 4, 2025), bonus depreciation is permanently restored to 100% for qualifying property acquired and placed in service after January 19, 2025, per IRS Notice 2026-11. For the $6M example, that means the owner may deduct the full $1,920,000 in year one.

For property placed in service between January 1 and January 19, 2025, the prior TCJA 40% rate applies; property placed in service in 2024 received 60%.

For self-constructed properties, the acquisition date is determined by when physical work of significant nature begins: if more than 10% of total expected project costs were incurred before January 19, 2025, the property is treated as acquired before that date and subject to the 40% rate even if placed in service afterward.

A component election may provide relief in some cases; confirm the applicable rate with a cost segregation specialist for projects that straddle this date. For the full breakdown, see how cost segregation and bonus depreciation interact.

All figures are illustrative estimates. Bonus depreciation eligibility depends on the placed-in-service date, property type, and the owner’s tax profile. Confirm with your CPA before making financial decisions.

Retroactive Studies for Older Refrigeration Buildings

Cold storage buildings acquired or constructed in prior years remain eligible for a cost segregation study via a change in accounting method filed on Form 3115, which allows all missed depreciation from prior years to be claimed as a single catch-up deduction in the current year. No amended returns are required.

Refrigeration buildings held for 5 to 10 years tend to be the strongest retroactive candidates, because the gap between claimed and reclassifiable depreciation is typically at its widest in that window.

How a Cost Segregation Study Works on Refrigeration Buildings

Refrigeration buildings require a more rigorous study process than standard commercial properties because distinguishing process-specific refrigeration infrastructure from structural components is not simple.

The IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide sets the compliance standard, and the IRS requires engineering-based methodology for complex industrial properties as outlined in that document and in IRS Publication 5653.

At Seneca, here is what the cost segregation study process looks like for refrigeration and cold storage facilities:

Step 1: Facility Review and Documentation Gathering

We start with construction drawings, equipment schedules, contractor invoices, purchase records, and any existing depreciation schedules.

For refrigeration buildings specifically, we also collect refrigeration system schematics, equipment specifications for compressors and evaporators, insulated panel specs, and floor system records covering glycol loops and vapor barriers.

Step 2: Engineering Analysis and Component Classification

A qualified engineer reviews the facility component by component, maps each to an IRS asset class, and determines whether it serves the operation or the building’s structural function.

In refrigeration buildings, this requires careful judgment: a rooftop condensing unit, an ammonia piping system, and a general HVAC unit may all look like mechanical equipment, but they fall into different recovery periods based on function and design intent.

Step 3: Report Delivery and CPA Integration

The deliverable is a detailed engineering report: all reclassified components, their depreciation classes, the supporting methodology, and a fixed asset schedule that the owner’s CPA uses directly. For retroactive studies, the CPA files Form 3115 to capture the catch-up deduction in the current year.

Seneca Cost Segregation is an engineering firm specializing in cost segregation studies for single-family rentals and large commercial properties across all 50 states, all property types. We combine engineering precision with IRS compliance to deliver studies that hold up under scrutiny.

Contact us today to get a no-cost estimate and finally see what your property is worth on paper.

 
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Common Pitfalls in Cost Segregation for Cold Storage Properties

Six patterns consistently reduce financial benefit or create audit exposure in cold storage and refrigeration building studies:

  • Lumping refrigeration assets into general “mechanical equipment”: this misses the distinction between a glycol distribution system (5-year) and general HVAC (39-year), both of which can appear identically on a contractor invoice.
  • Ignoring site improvements: refrigerated dock doors, tire-cleaning stations, and specialized truck court paving are frequently overlooked and can represent a meaningful share of 15-year deductions on large campuses.
  • Failing to separate cold storage zones in a mixed-use property: only components serving the refrigerated zones qualify for accelerated treatment; a study that treats ambient and refrigerated sections uniformly underdelivers and may not meet American Society of Cost Segregation Professionals methodology standards.
  • Using a software-only or template-based study: these approaches cannot document the process-specific nature of refrigeration infrastructure and will not hold up under IRS scrutiny.
  • Missing the timing window on new construction: the optimal point is at or before the first tax return; when bonus depreciation is available, the cost of delay is compounded.
  • Skipping documentation of proprietary refrigeration system details: ammonia piping routes, glycol loop maps, and equipment specifications are required to justify asset classifications under IRS review.

What Cold Storage Owners Should Look for in a Cost Segregation Firm

The criteria below matter more for refrigeration buildings than for simpler commercial property types, because the classification work is more technically demanding:

Selection Criterion Why It Matters for Cold Storage Properties
Cold storage or industrial property experience Refrigeration infrastructure requires specialized classification knowledge not found in generalist studies
Engineering-based methodology IRS requires defensible asset-by-asset documentation for complex industrial properties
Audit defense policy Provider should support their findings if the IRS reviews the study
Transparent pricing structure Fees tied to a percentage of projected savings create a conflict of interest; fixed or scope-based pricing is preferable
CPA coordination capability Study findings must integrate cleanly with existing depreciation records and tax filings

For owners evaluating multiple providers, the top cost segregation companies article offers a useful starting comparison.

 
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Cold storage and refrigeration building owners tend to have specific questions about what qualifies, what the numbers look like, and how the process works.

Here are the most common ones:

Does the Refrigeration Equipment Itself Qualify for Cost Segregation?

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Freestanding equipment, such as standalone compressor units or portable refrigeration machines, is typically already expensed or depreciated as equipment rather than as real property, placing it outside the scope of a cost segregation study.

Cost segregation focuses on built-in infrastructure: refrigeration piping embedded in walls or floors, dedicated electrical systems serving refrigeration loads, insulated panels, and other components that are part of the building but serve the cold storage operation.

Consult both your CPA and a cost segregation specialist to clarify the exact boundary for your facility.

What ROI Can a Cold Storage Owner Typically Expect?

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Study fees for cold storage facilities typically run from a few thousand dollars for smaller buildings to $15,000 or more for large distribution campuses.

Tax savings commonly produce a 10:1 or better return on the study cost when bonus depreciation is available, and the study is done close to acquisition or construction. The return is highest in the first year when reclassified assets are eligible for full bonus depreciation.

Can Cost Segregation Be Applied to a Leased Cold Storage Facility?

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Property owners who funded their own tenant improvements or fit-outs in a leased cold storage space may be able to commission a study on those build-out costs.

The lessee must have ownership or depreciable interest in the improvements rather than just occupancy rights; a CPA review should confirm eligibility before engaging a cost segregation firm.

Do Refrigeration Buildings Need a Separate Study from the Rest of a Mixed-Use Property?

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A single cost segregation study can cover an entire mixed-use industrial property, including both ambient and refrigerated zones.

The refrigeration zones typically yield a higher reclassification rate than the ambient areas, and the study should reflect this distinction by allocating space appropriately to ensure each zone’s components are correctly classified.

At What Building Value Does a Cost Segregation Study Pay Off for Cold Storage?

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Studies typically make financial sense when the property’s depreciable basis is $500,000 or more. Cold storage facilities often clear that threshold more readily than simpler property types because higher reclassification rates produce stronger savings relative to study cost.

Use the cost segregation calculator to model your specific numbers before committing to a full engagement.

Conclusion

Refrigeration buildings are among the most cost segregation-friendly property types in commercial real estate because so much of their construction cost is tied to specialized systems that wear out far faster than the 39-year structural shell suggests.

With permanent 100% bonus depreciation now in place, owners commissioning a study on newly acquired or constructed cold storage facilities can realize the full financial benefit in year one. For older facilities, a retroactive study captures the same opportunity in a single catch-up deduction. Start with a free savings estimate or reach out to Seneca directly for a no-cost preliminary analysis on your specific facility.

For over 12 years, Seneca Cost Segregation’s engineering team has helped residential and commercial property owners across all 50 states unlock accelerated depreciation and improve cash flow. Our clients average $171,243 in first-year deductions, and that capital compounds when reinvested into the next property.

Every study is delivered with a money-back audit defense guarantee built in. The deductions are likely already there; they just have not been identified yet.

Request a free proposal and see exactly what your property qualifies for.

dylan scandalios - cost segregation expert - Seneca Cost Segregation

Dylan Scandalios

Cost Segregation Expert | Owner of Seneca Cost Segregation​

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