Lookback studies

Find missed depreciation in rentals your clients already own.

A lookback cost segregation study catches up depreciation that was available in prior years but never accelerated. No sale. No refinance. No amended prior-year return — a method change filed on this year's return.

Three families
One mechanism
Form filed
Form 3115
Adjustment type
§481(a) catch-up
Prior returns reopened
None
Okafor-Patel inherited Victorian
Mrs Sato beach cottage
Brennans recent SFR
Three families, three reasons, one lookback

The mechanism is the same. The client value changes with the facts.

A lookback finds depreciation that could have been accelerated since the property's original placed-in-service date. What that tax value means depends on the property type, the holding period, and the client's broader tax picture.

Inherited property

The Okafor-Patels keep the family asset.

A Brooklyn Victorian stepped up to fair market value at the date of death. The family keeps the property and converts the tax value into reinvestment capital.

Inherited basis$2.4M
Depreciable basis$1.68M
Lookback catch-up$214,000
Potential federal tax value
~$79,000

So what: tax value funds the next generation without selling the asset.

STR-to-LTR conversion

Mrs Sato finds value before buying the next one.

A long-term rental held five years, originally listed short-term. The CPA finds missed depreciation before she raises capital for the next STR acquisition.

Purchase price$850K
Depreciable basis$680K
Lookback catch-up$148,000
Potential federal tax value
~$47,000

So what: the existing property funds the down payment on the next one.

Recent SFR acquisition

The Brennans show that one year still matters.

A single-family rental placed in service last year. One year of missed accelerated depreciation becomes a current-year deduction and a future tax asset.

Purchase price$1.2M
Depreciable basis$960K
Lookback catch-up$96,000
Potential federal tax value
~$31,000

So what: tuition gets funded from tax value inside the property, not new debt.

"Potential federal tax value" shown before §469 passive-loss limits, REPS qualification, and state conformity. The CPA's broader tax review decides how much becomes cash this year.
The mechanism

What a lookback actually does.

A lookback does not reopen old returns. It compares what the client already depreciated to what they could have depreciated under the corrected method. The difference is filed as a §481(a) adjustment on the current return.

01

Start with the existing property

An existing rental already on the depreciation schedule. Any placed-in-service year.

02

Reclassify the basis

Split the depreciable basis into 5-, 15-, and 27.5-year buckets per the IRS CSATG.

03

Recompute from original PIS

Bonus % follows the original placed-in-service year, not the year the lookback is filed.

04

Catch up on this year's return

The difference lands as a §481(a) adjustment, filed with Form 3115. No amended prior returns.

The bonus rate is set by when the property was placed in service. A 2020 purchase carries 100% bonus on short-life basis even when the lookback is filed today.
The math

Same formula every time.

The dollars change with the property and the client. The equation does not.

      Corrected depreciation through today
    − Depreciation already claimed
    ───────────────────────────────────────
    = §481(a) catch-up deduction
Usable now
If the deduction lands against income on this year's return
Carried forward
If §469 limits, recorded on Form 8582 for future use
Planning event needed
If unlock depends on a future sale or status change
The study finds the deduction. The client's tax posture decides when it becomes cash.
Where this connects

Lookback is the starting point. The next question is usability.

Once the deduction exists, the property type and client facts decide how it converts to cash. Four case studies show the patterns.

What Unlevered does

Your client sees hidden tax value inside a property they already own. You see the method change.

The platform finds lookback candidates across your existing rental book, computes the §481(a) catch-up, shows whether the deduction is usable this year, and ships Form 3115 support with a defensible component audit trail.

  • 01Finds lookback candidates across the client's existing rental book
  • 02Computes the §481(a) catch-up using original placed-in-service bonus rates
  • 03Shows what's usable this year vs what carries forward
  • 04Produces Form 3115 support and a component-level audit trail
Checks before quoting a number

Most lookbacks are mechanical. These facts change the answer.

Unlevered screens for each before the CPA quotes the client. Catching them in March is expensive.

Acquisition
Related-party purchase
Convention
Mid-quarter convention
State conformity
Bonus depreciation conformity
Method history
Prior method change on file
Estimate the missed depreciation

Quick math. Not a substitute for a real study.

Enter placed-in-service year, depreciable basis, and reclass profile. The estimator shows the estimated §481(a) catch-up and potential federal tax value.

Placed-in-service year2020
Depreciable basis$1,000,000
Reclass profile
Federal marginal rate
Bonus % at original PIS100%
§481(a) catch-up estimate$0
Potential federal tax value$0
Illustrative only. Actual results depend on engineered component analysis, prior depreciation, state conformity, and the client's passive-income picture. Does not model AMT, NIIT, or §163(j).
For your clients

Find the missed depreciation in your client's rental book.

Run a lookback study, show the catch-up deduction, and give the client a clear savings story with the audit trail behind it.

Authority: IRC §168 · IRC §469 · IRC §481(a) · IRC §1014 · Form 3115 · IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide