In the evolving landscape of tax regulations, Tangible Property Regulations (TPR) continue to play a pivotal role in determining how businesses treat expenditures on tangible assets like buildings and equipment. The BAR test (Betterment, Adaptation, Restoration) remains the cornerstone for classifying costs as either immediately deductible repairs or capital improvements that must be depreciated over time. Established under the final regulations (Treas. Reg. § 1.263(a)-3) effective since 2014, these rules have seen no major overhauls through 2026, but their interplay with other strategies has never been more powerful.
At Veritax Advisors, we strategically apply Tangible Property Regulations in conjunction with cost segregation studies to create meaningful tax efficiencies through accelerated depreciation, increased deductions, and a lower risk profile. Cost segregation reclassifies portions of a building's cost basis into shorter depreciable lives (e.g., 5-, 7-, or 15-year personal property vs. 27.5 or 39-year building life), often identifying 25-45% of a property's basis for faster recovery. When combined with TPR analysis, this approach ensures that improvements are properly evaluated under the BAR test while optimizing the entire asset portfolio for tax efficiency. This is especially timely in 2026 with the restoration of 100% bonus depreciation under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA).
Our interdisciplinary team of tax professionals and engineers conduct integrated studies that analyze the building envelope, systems, and components. This seamless process spans qualitative reviews (e.g., Unit of Property determinations) and quantitative modeling, from initial feasibility assessments to full implementation. By aligning TPR compliance with cost segregation, clients can expense routine maintenance under safe harbors, capitalize improvements accurately, and then apply accelerated depreciation (including 100% bonus) to reclassified assets potentially generating millions in upfront tax savings!
Raise the “BAR” – and Synergize with Cost Segregation
The BAR test evaluates whether costs improve a Unit of Property (UoP), such as a building or its structural components. If they meet any criterion, the expenditure is capitalized and added to the asset's basis, where cost segregation can then break it down for faster depreciation. Here's how it works, with synergies highlighted:
Don't overlook TPR safe harbors to further enhance deductions:
The real power lies in integration: A single engineering-led study can satisfy IRS requirements for both TPR (e.g., documenting UoP and BAR) and cost segregation (e.g., detailed component breakdowns per Rev. Proc. 87-56). This minimizes audit risk, as the IRS increasingly scrutinizes these areas, and maximizes benefits under OBBBA's 100% bonus, making 2026 a prime window for action.
Whether you're a real estate investor, developer, or business owner, combining TPR compliance with cost segregation isn't just smart, it's essential for sustainable tax optimization. At Veritax Advisors, we've helped clients recover millions through these synergies.
Let's turn your property investments into immediate savings, reach out today!