The Short Answer
- Traditional engineering firms: 4–8 weeks (site visit required)
- Mid-tier providers: 1–3 weeks (site visit sometimes required)
- Automated engineering-based providers: under 1 hour (no site visit)
- All three use the same RSMeans cost data, IRS methodology, and MACRS classification rules—the difference is delivery speed, not study quality
A cost segregation study takes anywhere from under 1 hour to 8+ weeks, depending on the provider and methodology. Traditional engineering firms require site visits and manual analysis. Modern providers use the same cost data and methodology but with automated delivery.
The variation isn't about rigor or IRS compliance. Every legitimate cost segregation study follows the same IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide, uses the same MACRS asset class definitions under Rev. Proc. 87-56, and produces the same deliverable: a component-level reclassification of building costs into 5-year, 7-year, 15-year, and 27.5/39-year recovery periods. The variation is in how the work gets done—and how long you wait.
Timeline Comparison by Provider Type
| Provider Type | Typical Timeline | Site Visit? | Cost Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional engineering firm | 4–8 weeks | Yes, required | $3,000–$15,000 |
| Mid-tier provider | 1–3 weeks | Sometimes | $1,500–$5,000 |
| Automated engineering provider | Under 1 hour | No | $795–$6,995 |
The price and timeline differences are significant. A traditional firm charging $8,000 for a 6-week study and an automated provider delivering in 45 minutes are both producing engineering-based cost segregation reports with component-level MACRS classifications. The question is whether the manual process adds value for your specific property—or just adds weeks. For a full comparison of what cost segregation studies cost and what drives the price, see our pricing breakdown.
What Takes So Long with Traditional Firms
Traditional cost segregation firms built their processes in an era before satellite imagery, digital assessor records, and automated cost modeling. The workflow reflects that history. Here's where the time goes:
- Scheduling the site visit. The firm coordinates with the property owner or manager to schedule an on-site inspection. For out-of-state properties, this often requires travel arrangements. 3–10 business days
- Physical inspection. An engineer walks the property, photographs components, and takes measurements. For a single-family home, this takes a few hours. For a commercial building, a full day or more. 1–2 days on-site
- Manual cost estimation. Back at the office, the engineer manually estimates replacement costs for each building component using RSMeans or similar cost databases. This is the same data an automated system uses—but entered and calculated by hand. 5–10 business days
- Report writing and internal review. The engineer writes the narrative report, a senior reviewer checks the work, and the report goes through one or more revision cycles. 5–10 business days
- CPA coordination. Some firms send a draft to your CPA for review before finalizing, adding another round of back-and-forth. 3–7 business days
None of these steps are unnecessary in the traditional model. The site visit produces useful photographs and firsthand observation. The manual review catches errors. The problem isn't that the process is flawed—it's that most of the elapsed time is spent waiting, not working. Scheduling, travel, queue time between assignments, and review cycles account for the majority of the 4–8 week timeline.
How Automated Delivery Works
Automated engineering-based providers use the same foundational inputs as traditional firms. The cost data comes from the same source (RSMeans construction cost databases). The property data comes from the same public records (county assessor filings, tax records, building permits). The classification rules are the same (IRS MACRS asset class definitions). What changes is the execution.
Property data collection
County assessor records, tax filings, and public building data are pulled automatically. Square footage, year built, construction type, and lot size are verified against multiple sources.
Remote observation
Satellite imagery and street-level photography replace the physical site visit. Site improvements (driveways, landscaping, fencing, pools) are identified and measured. Customer-uploaded photos provide interior detail.
Component-level cost modeling
RSMeans-derived cost data, adjusted for geography using BLS Producer Price Index data, generates replacement cost estimates for every building component. Each component is classified into its proper MACRS recovery period.
QC validation and report generation
Automated quality checks verify that reclassification percentages, land allocation, and depreciation calculations fall within expected ranges. The 30+ page PDF report is generated with full depreciation schedules, component breakdowns, and methodology documentation.
The quality of a cost segregation study comes from the cost data and methodology, not the speed of delivery. RSMeans doesn't become more accurate when an engineer spends six weeks instead of six minutes looking up the same cost tables.
This is the same reason tax software replaced hand-calculated returns, and why engineering firms use AutoCAD instead of drafting tables. The math doesn't change. The classification rules don't change. The IRS doesn't give preferential treatment to studies that took longer to produce. What matters is whether the component-level analysis is thorough, the cost data is current, and the MACRS classifications are correct. For a deeper look at how cost segregation works and what the study includes, see our overview.
When Timing Matters
For many investors, a cost segregation study is a "get to it eventually" item. But there are several situations where the timeline directly affects the financial outcome:
Tax filing deadlines
If you acquired a property in 2025 and need to claim accelerated depreciation on your 2025 return, the study needs to be complete before your CPA files. For calendar-year taxpayers, that's April 15, 2026—or October 15 with an extension. An 8-week traditional timeline means you need to start by early February at the latest. An automated study can be ordered the week before filing.
Year-end tax planning
CPAs advising clients on year-end tax strategies need depreciation numbers to model scenarios. A study that arrives in January isn't useful for December planning conversations. Speed matters here because the window for action is narrow. If you want to understand what your CPA will need, see what your CPA needs to know about cost segregation.
1031 exchange timelines
Investors completing a 1031 exchange often want to run a cost segregation study on the replacement property immediately after closing. The exchange timeline is already compressed (45 days to identify, 180 days to close), and adding 4–8 weeks for a cost seg study on top of that creates unnecessary coordination overhead.
Look-back studies
Here's the exception: if you're doing a look-back study on a property you've owned for years, timing is less critical. You can file a Form 3115 (Change in Accounting Method) in any tax year to claim missed depreciation from prior years. There's no wrong time to do a cost seg study—but if you're approaching a filing deadline, speed matters.
Your Timeline with Cost Seg Smart
How It Works
Order online in 5 minutes. Enter your property address, purchase price, and property type. Upload any closing documents or photos you have (optional but helpful). Pay online—pricing starts at $795 for residential properties.
Receive your report in under 1 hour. Your 30+ page CPA-ready report arrives by email. It includes a full component-level breakdown, MACRS depreciation schedules, Year 1 deduction calculations with 100% bonus depreciation, and the methodology documentation your CPA needs to file.
Your CPA files it on your next return. Forward the report to your CPA. For current-year properties, they claim the accelerated depreciation on your return. For prior-year properties, they file a Form 3115 to capture missed depreciation in a single year. No site visit, no scheduling, no back-and-forth.
Whether your property is a furnished Airbnb, an unfurnished single-family rental, or a commercial building, the process and timeline are the same. Want to see your estimated depreciation breakdown before ordering? The calculator takes 60 seconds and requires no signup.
Frequently Asked Questions
It depends on the provider. Traditional engineering firms that require site visits typically take 4–8 weeks. Mid-tier providers with optional site visits deliver in 1–3 weeks. Automated engineering-based providers like Cost Seg Smart deliver a full 30+ page CPA-ready report in under 1 hour. All three use the same IRS-recognized methodology and RSMeans cost data—the difference is in delivery speed, not study quality.
Yes. Engineering-based providers that use automated delivery can produce a complete cost segregation study in under an hour. The report includes a full component-level breakdown, MACRS classification schedules, depreciation calculations with 100% bonus depreciation, and the documentation your CPA needs to file. There is no waiting period, no site visit to schedule, and no back-and-forth review process.
Not necessarily. Traditional firms require physical site inspections, which is one reason their studies take 4–8 weeks. Modern engineering-based providers use satellite imagery, county assessor records, and construction cost databases to perform the same component-level analysis remotely. The IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide does not mandate a physical inspection—it requires a detailed analysis of building components and their proper MACRS classification, which can be performed using remote observation and public data sources. For more on choosing between providers, see our guide on how to choose a cost segregation company.
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