Remodel dispositions

Tear out the kitchen. Deduct the kitchen.

When a remodel removes a building component, the component's unrecovered basis becomes a current-year deduction — but only if cost seg gave it its own basis first. The Okafor-Patel inheritance Victorian shows how lookback and partial disposition stack into one return.

Cost seg catch-up
$280K
Partial disposition
$96K
Total year-1
$376K
Federal tax saved
$139K
The Okafor-Patel family in front of their inherited Victorian
The clients

Meet the Okafor-Patels.

Adaeze and Ravi inherited a 4-bedroom Brooklyn Victorian in 2024 — stepped-up basis $1.4M. They placed it in service as a long-term rental and started taking standard depreciation.

In 2025 they gutted the kitchen — full studs-out renovation, $140K spend. Their CPA didn't just ask, "How do we capitalize the new kitchen?"

The real question was: what happened to the basis of the kitchen we removed?

The sequence

The remodel creates two deductions, not one.

Six checks in order. The lookback finds depreciation Adaeze and Ravi could have accelerated. The partial-disposition election deducts the basis of the kitchen they removed. Both flow through this year's return.

StepWhat happenedWhat this unlocks
01 Inherited 2024 — stepped-up basis to $1.4M under IRC §1014 $1.12M depreciable basis
02 Placed in service as LTR; took standard 27.5-yr SL for one year Lookback candidate identified
03 CPA ran cost seg + Form 3115 → §481(a) catch-up on the prior year $280K catch-up
04 Cost seg gave the original kitchen its own basis line at $120K Disposable basis exists
05 Partial disposition election under Reg §1.168(i)-8(d) on the demolished kitchen $96K unrecovered basis deducted
06 New kitchen ($140K) capitalized on its own basis line going forward Schedule cleaned, no double-counting
The math
Cost seg catch-up:           $280,000
Partial disposition:          $96,000
─────────────────────────────────────
Total deduction created:     $376,000
Federal tax rate:                  37%
~Potential federal tax value: ~$139,000
The remodel isn't just construction spend — it's a basis event. Cost seg gave the old kitchen its own basis line. Partial disposition closed that line cleanly when the demolition happened.
The mechanic

A house isn't one asset. Components have their own life.

Cost segregation separates a building into its tax components. When a remodel demolishes a component, the partial-disposition election under §1.168(i)-8 lets the unrecovered basis of that component become a current-year deduction. The catch: the election only works if the component had its own basis line to begin with.

How partial disposition stacks with cost seg

Without cost seg, the kitchen, the roof, the HVAC, and the framing all roll up into one 27.5-year residential building asset. When the kitchen is demolished, there's nothing to dispose — the building still exists.

With cost seg, the kitchen has its own basis line. When it's demolished, that basis line is closed. The remaining unrecovered amount lands on the current return as a deduction. The election must be made on a timely-filed return for the year of disposition.

Original kitchen basis (from cost seg):     $120,000
Depreciation already taken (1 yr at 5-yr):   $24,000
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Unrecovered basis at demolition:             $96,000
Treatment: current-year deduction on disposition.
The property

Inherited 2024. Gutted 2025.

Inherited basis is stepped up to the fair market value at the date of death — which means the Okafor-Patels are running cost seg against a $1.4M basis, not the original cost basis from when Adaeze's mother bought the property in 1992. The full reclassification opportunity is available against the stepped-up number.

Property typeSingle-family (Victorian)
LocationBrooklyn, NY
Acquired byInheritance, 2024
Stepped-up basis$1,400,000
Less land value$280,000
Depreciable basis$1,120,000
Placed in service as rentalJul 2024
Kitchen remodel spend$140,000

What the CPA filed

01
Cost seg study on the 2024 inherited basis. Ran the property through Unlevered. Reclassified the $1.12M depreciable basis into 5-, 15-, and 27.5-year buckets, identifying $280K of bonus-eligible short-life.
02
Filed Form 3115 with the 2025 return. Method change, automatic IRS consent. The §481(a) catch-up captured the depreciation that could have been accelerated in 2024 but wasn't.
03
Elected partial disposition on the demolished kitchen. Under Reg §1.168(i)-8(d). The cost seg study had assigned the original kitchen its own basis line; that line closed when the kitchen was demolished. $96K of unrecovered basis lands as a current-year deduction.
04
Capitalized the new kitchen. The $140K of new kitchen work creates a fresh basis line that depreciates going forward — also subject to its own future partial-disposition election.
Three spend tiers

Not every remodel triggers a disposition.

The bigger the spend, the more components get touched, and the larger the disposition deduction available. Three tiers map cleanly to typical CPA conversations: cosmetic refreshes don't trigger; partial remodels generate room-by-room dispositions; full guts produce the largest deductions.

Tier 1

Cosmetic

Under $25,000

Paint, fixtures, light hardware swaps. Components stay in place. Typically capitalized as improvements; no partial disposition election available.

Disposition: typically none. No demolished basis to write off.
Tier 2 — the Okafor-Patels

Partial / room-by-room

$25,000 – $200,000

Specific systems or rooms gutted. Kitchen, bath, HVAC. Each disposed component generates its own partial-disposition deduction — but only if cost seg established a separate basis line first.

Disposition: $50K – $150K typical. Stack with lookback cost seg for the highest-leverage play.
Tier 3

Full gut

$200,000+

Studs-out renovation. Significant dispositions of structural components, mechanicals, and finishes. The whole component schedule resets.

Disposition: often six figures. Requires careful component-by-component basis tracking.
Every meaningful rental remodel creates a tax question: what happened to the basis of the components removed?
How the deduction stacks

Two deductions, one return. $376,000 total.

The Okafor-Patels' 2025 return runs the cost seg catch-up alongside the partial-disposition election. Both flow through Schedule E. Both land in the current year. Together with first-year MACRS on the building shell, the household's year-one deduction tops $376K — federal tax saved at 37% comes to $139K.

Year-one stack
Cost seg §481(a) catch-up:       $280,000
Partial disposition (kitchen):    $96,000
1st-yr MACRS on shell:             $0
                                  (already
                                  in basis)
─────────────────────────────────────────
Total year-one deduction:        $376,000

At 37% federal rate:
Federal tax saved:               $139,000
Cost seg catch-up
$280,000
§481(a) on the 2024 stepped-up basis · captures missed acceleration.
Partial disposition
$96,000
Unrecovered basis of the demolished kitchen · only available because cost seg gave it a basis line.
Federal tax saved
$139,000
$376K × 37% federal rate · study fee $4K · ROI: 35×.
The cost seg deduction always exists. The partial-disposition deduction exists only because cost seg gave the demolished components their own basis. Run them apart, you leave the second deduction on the floor.
Where these plans break

Three places partial dispositions fail.

The election is a current-year choice — the IRS doesn't let you go back and grab last year's disposition if it wasn't elected on the timely-filed return. The defensive workflow is built into the study, not bolted on afterward.

Risk 1

Election timing missed

Partial disposition has to be elected on a timely-filed return — including extensions — for the year of disposition. After that, it's lost. The engine surfaces remodel events on the property timeline so the election lands when the return is filed.

Risk 2

No prior cost seg basis

If the property never had cost seg, the demolished kitchen never had its own basis. The election fails for lack of a deductible amount. Lookback cost seg + disposition together solve this; either alone leaves dollars on the floor.

Risk 3

Disposed component still on schedule

After disposition, the component must be removed from the depreciation schedule. The new kitchen capitalizes separately with its own life and bonus rules. The engine handles both — basis line closed, new basis line opened, no double-counting.

What Unlevered does

Stacks the two plays. Tracks the basis lines.

Most cost seg tools stop at the catch-up. Unlevered handles the partial-disposition workflow as a first-class step — because the disposition deduction exists only because the cost seg study made it possible. Same engine, both deductions, one audit trail.

Remodel events on the property timeline

Add a remodel as an event on the property. Engine identifies which previously-classified components were demolished, computes their unrecovered basis, and proposes the partial-disposition election with the §1.168(i)-8(d) citation.

Component basis lines tracked

Every reclassified component has its own basis line that depreciates on its own schedule. When it disposes, the line closes; when a new component takes its place, a new line opens. No silent double-counting.

Timely-election watchdog

If the return is filed without the partial-disposition election after a demolition event, the engine warns before delivery. The dollars don't go missing because nobody clicked the box.

Stepped-up basis on inheritance

Inherited property steps up to fair market value at date of death. The engine takes the appraisal as the cost seg basis input — no carryover-basis problem. The full reclassification opportunity is available.

Try your own scenario

What would a different remodel spend, or a different basis, look like?

Adjust the depreciable basis, remodel spend, and which components were demolished. The estimator computes the §481(a) catch-up + partial disposition together. Illustrative only — real returns depend on component-level documentation.

Depreciable basis$1,120,000
Years held before remodel1
Components disposed
Federal marginal rate
Cost seg catch-up$280,000
Partial disposition$96,000
Total year-1 deduction$376,000
Federal tax saved$139,000
Illustrative only. Applies a 25% short-life reclass ratio, 100% bonus at PIS, half-year MACRS, and component-disposition table for typical residential remodels. Does not model AMT, NIIT, §163(j), or state conformity. Run a real study →
For your clients

Show the client what the property is worth for tax.

Run the study, show the usable deduction, and give the client a clear savings story with the audit trail behind it.

Authority: IRC §168 · IRC §481(a) · Treas. Reg. §1.168(i)-8 · IRC §1014 · Form 3115