A real, redacted study, shown in full

Sample fitness center cost segregation report

A real, redacted Cost Seg Smart fitness center / gym property study, shown so you can see exactly what the deliverable contains and how the component allocation works. The numbers below come from one illustrative Naperville, IL example.

This Naperville, IL study, by the numbers

One illustrative sample, not a benchmark
Depreciable basis
$2,050,000
Reclassified into 5/7/15-yr
39.2%
Accelerated basis
$803,549
Illustrative Year-1 deduction
$820,861

Gyms with extensive equipment, specialty flooring, and locker or sauna build-outs reclassify more; a bare-bones studio will land lower. Request the full sample PDF →

Inside the report: actual pages

Real pages from a fitness center study (an illustrative Naperville, IL subject property, figures redacted where needed). This is the actual deliverable, not a brochure mockup. Click any page to open it full size.

The report itself

Fitness center cost segregation report cover page example
Page 1: the subject property, a scaled parcel map, and the headline result for this illustrative Naperville fitness center. Every report carries a verification ID and revision number.

Engineering analysis summary

Fitness center cost segregation report engineering analysis summary example
The summary a CPA reads first: purchase price, non-depreciable land, total depreciable basis, and the accelerated reclassification total.

Allocation by asset class

Fitness center cost segregation report component allocation by asset class example
How the basis splits across 5-, 7-, 15-, and 39-year property. A gym carries an unusually large 7-year bucket from specialty finishes and locker or sauna build-outs alongside 5-year equipment.

MACRS depreciation schedules

Fitness center cost segregation report MACRS depreciation schedule example
Year-by-year MACRS deduction tables with 100% bonus applied, formatted to drop straight onto Form 4562.

IRS methodology, addressed

Fitness center cost segregation report IRS ATG methodology example
Each IRS Audit Techniques Guide (Pub 5653) quality element mapped to where the report addresses it, plus the allocation bridge from purchase price to MACRS classes.

Illustrative result from one sample report. Actual reclassification varies substantially with property age, improvements, tenant finish, equipment, land value, and other facts. Not a benchmark or expected range.

Why gyms and fitness centers reclassify heavily

This illustrative Naperville fitness center reached 39.2% because it carries equipment plus a specialty build-out. Gyms frequently contain:

  • Strength and cardio equipment
  • Heavy-duty rubber and specialty flooring
  • Wall mirrors and fixtures
  • Locker rooms, saunas, and showers
  • Specialty HVAC and ventilation
  • Parking and site lighting

Gyms accelerate equipment, specialty flooring, mirrors, and locker or sauna build-outs into 5- and 7-year property. A bare-bones studio reclassifies far less than a full-service club.

Illustrative component allocation

Gyms accelerate equipment, heavy-duty rubber flooring, mirrors, and specialty locker/sauna finishes into 5- and 7-year property. Below is how this one sample report split its $2,050,000 depreciable basis across MACRS classes (Section 3 of the deliverable lists every component line by line).

MACRS class Allocated basis % of basis
5-Year Personal Property
Equipment, rubber/specialty flooring, mirrors, fixtures
$371,826 18.1%
7-Year Personal Property
Specialty finishes, locker/sauna build-outs, furnishings
$353,000 17.2%
15-Year Land Improvements
Parking, landscaping, site lighting
$78,723 3.8%
39-Year Commercial Shell
Structural building and base systems
$1,246,451 60.8%
Accelerated (5/7/15-year) $803,549 39.2%

Where the depreciation comes from

5-Year Personal Property $371,826 · 18.1%
7-Year Personal Property $353,000 · 17.2%
15-Year Land Improvements $78,723 · 3.8%
39-Year Commercial Shell $1,246,451 · 60.8%
Accelerated (5/7/15-year) Building shell (39-year)

Illustrative result from one sample report. Actual reclassification varies substantially with property age, improvements, tenant finish, equipment, land value, and other facts. Not a benchmark or expected range. Tax-side figures assume the placed-in-service year's §168(k) bonus rate and an assumed entity rate; actual depends on entity structure, state conformity, passive-activity limits (§469), and at-risk basis (§465). Verify with your CPA before filing.

Why your result will differ from this example

No two fitness center properties reclassify the same. The 39.2% above came from one specific building. Yours depends on:

  • Property age — newer buildings carry more reclassifiable finishes and systems.
  • Renovations and tenant improvements — recent build-outs add 5- and 7-year assets.
  • Equipment intensity — equipment-heavy uses (kitchens, service bays, medical) reclassify more.
  • Site work — extensive paving, parking, and landscaping drive the 15-year bucket.
  • Land value — a higher land share leaves less depreciable basis to reclassify.
  • Local construction costs and finish level — these shift each component's allocated basis.

That is why we model your specific property before you commit, and never apply a rule-of-thumb percentage. The IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide (Pub 5653) warns against template and rule-of-thumb studies for exactly this reason.

Why CPAs file straight from these reports

Every fitness center study delivers the same six-section structure, so your CPA can file without rework. Depth scales with property size and lookback complexity.

Section 1

Executive summary

2-3 pages

The one-page summary your CPA reads first: total reclassified, the Year-1 deduction, and the technical-review sign-off.

Section 2

Engineering methodology

3-5 pages

Shows why each asset was assigned its depreciation class, and documents the reasoning behind every allocation.

Section 3

Component allocation tables

8-15 pages

Every component (typically 40 to 80 line items) mapped to its asset class and MACRS life, with subtotals that reconcile to the depreciable basis.

Section 4

Depreciation schedules

3-6 pages

Year-by-year MACRS deduction tables, formatted to drop straight onto Form 4562, with bonus depreciation flagged for the placed-in-service year.

Section 5

Section 481(a) lookback workpaper

4-8 pages

For a Form 3115 catch-up: the cumulative Section 481(a) adjustment and a line-by-line reference for your tax preparer (when applicable).

Section 6

Documentation and audit support

4-8 pages

A cost-source citation for every component, the classification rationale, and a ready-made response pack for examiner questions. 36 months of support included.

How the report addresses IRS examiner standards

The IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide (Pub 5653) lists the elements an examiner reviews, and the report maps to each one: the engineering methodology and component allocation document every classification, each component carries a Rev. Proc. 87-56 asset-class citation with its rationale, and the final section supplies a ready-made examiner-question response pack.

Every study includes 36 months of audit support at no additional charge. Full scope at /audit-defense/.

How this compares with traditional firms

Cost Seg Smart Traditional firms
DeliverySame day to a few days4 to 8 weeks
PriceFrom $495$2,500 to $8,000+
Engineering methodology (Rev. Proc. 87-56, IRS ATG)
CPA-ready Form 4562 schedules
Form 3115 lookback support
36-month audit supportVaries by firm
On-site visit requiredNoOften

Traditional-firm figures are typical industry ranges; confirm pricing and scope directly with any vendor. For the full firm-by-firm breakdown see best cost segregation companies.

Report questions

Is this a real fitness center cost segregation report?
The figures on this page are transcribed from a real, redacted Cost Seg Smart fitness center study (an illustrative Naperville, IL subject property). It is one example, shown to illustrate the deliverable and the kind of component allocation a fitness center produces. Illustrative result from one sample report. Actual reclassification varies substantially with property age, improvements, tenant finish, equipment, land value, and other facts. Not a benchmark or expected range. You can request the full illustrative PDF for this property type by email.
What reclassification percentage should I expect for a fitness center?
There is no single expected number. This illustrative sample reclassified 39.2% of depreciable basis, but your result depends on age, improvements, finish level, equipment, and land value. Gyms accelerate equipment, heavy-duty rubber flooring, mirrors, and specialty locker/sauna finishes into 5- and 7-year property. We model your actual property before you commit; we never apply a rule-of-thumb percentage, which the IRS Audit Techniques Guide warns against.
Can I download the sample PDF?
Yes. A complete, illustrative full-length fitness center sample report is available through the sample request form (one email, one PDF). It is clearly watermarked as an illustrative sample and is not a specific customer's report.
Does the report include Form 3115 for a lookback?
We provide the engineering workpapers and §481(a) computation that support a Form 3115 filing; your CPA prepares and files the Form 3115 itself. Form 3115 is automatic-consent for cost-seg method changes under Rev. Proc. 2015-13, so no IRS pre-approval is required. See our Form 3115 walkthrough.
How is this different from a benchmark or a percentage range?
A benchmark implies a promised outcome. This page shows one engineered result with its actual class-by-class allocation, transcribed from the deliverable. Illustrative result from one sample report. Actual reclassification varies substantially with property age, improvements, tenant finish, equipment, land value, and other facts. Not a benchmark or expected range.

See your fitness center's real numbers, not a sample's.

We model your specific property before you pay. Order an engineered study or request the full illustrative fitness center sample PDF first.

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