- The median Miami STR generates ~$53,000 in Year-1 federal tax savings on a $725K Wynwood townhouse at the 37% bracket with 100% bonus depreciation under OBBBA (2025+). Engine-truth reclassification: 28.2% of depreciable basis into 5/7/15-year MACRS classes — slightly above national STR median due to year-round international tourism FF&E demand and Florida hurricane-code premium systems.
- Miami land allocation runs 18%–38% depending on neighborhood, per Miami-Dade Property Appraiser records. Premium urban-core (Coconut Grove luxury) hits 38%; Brickell tower-density runs 36%; Wynwood post-redevelopment runs 28%; inland workforce neighborhoods (Doral, Kendall, Hialeah) run ~18%.
- Miami Beach STR ban does NOT affect federal cost segregation eligibility. Miami Beach Section 142-905 restricts STR operations to specific RM zones, but federal depreciation depends on the property generating rental income — not on the rental's permit class. Owners pivoting from STR to LTR still capture cost-seg benefit at LTR (~19%) reclassification.
Cost segregation is a 25-year-old US tax strategy with most of its industry data locked behind paid reports or major-firm marketing claims. Miami's massive 2010–2024 condo and mid-rise boom plus year-round international tourism create a particularly clean dataset: a city with consistent property-type composition (Brickell/Edgewater high-rise, Wynwood mid-rise, Coral Gables luxury SFR, Miami Beach historic) and well-documented Miami-Dade Property Appraiser records.
This page publishes Miami-specific cost-segregation benchmarks as an open dataset. Numbers are engine-truth outputs from the Cost Seg Smart cost segregation engine, calibrated against RSMeans 2024 construction cost data, MACRS classification per Rev. Proc. 87-56, and the IRS Cost Segregation Audit Techniques Guide (Pub 5653). Land allocation reflects Miami-Dade Property Appraiser typical ratios. CC-BY 4.0; cite with attribution.
Miami cost segregation at a glance
Methodology & data sources
The numbers on this page are produced by the Cost Seg Smart cost segregation engine, applying RSMeans 2024 cost data + MACRS classification per Rev. Proc. 87-56 + the IRS ATG framework to representative Miami property profiles.
- RSMeans 2024 Building Construction Cost Data — primary $/SF cost basis with regional cost multipliers calibrated to South Florida construction.
- Miami-Dade Property Appraiser (miamidade.gov/pa) — assessor records for land allocation methodology.
- IRS Pub 946 — depreciation rules, MACRS conventions, recovery-period tables.
- Rev. Proc. 87-56 — asset class lives.
- IRS Pub 5653 (Cost Segregation ATG) — 13-element quality framework.
- BLS Producer Price Index (Construction) — time-index cost adjustment.
- Florida Building Code (2002+) — hurricane-resistant component classification context.
- Miami Beach Code Section 142-905 — STR ordinance context.
Reclassification percentage by Miami property type
| Property type | Median accel % | 5-year % | 15-year % | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Short-term rental (STR / Airbnb) | 28.2% | ~21% | ~7% | Above national STR median due to year-round international tourism FF&E density |
| Single-family rental (LTR) | 19.0% | ~9% | ~10% | Standard suburban SFR profile, slight premium for hurricane-code mechanical |
| Condo (Brickell / Edgewater high-rise) | 14.0% | ~13% | ~1% | HOA-owned site improvements reduce per-unit share |
| Duplex / triplex / fourplex | 20.0% | ~12% | ~8% | Edgewater and Wynwood see slight premium for hurricane-rated systems |
| Office (Brickell / Coral Gables / Wynwood) | 27.5% | ~17% | ~10% | Premium commercial finishes + hurricane-rated mechanical |
| Retail / restaurant (Wynwood / South Beach / Brickell) | 31.0% | ~22% | ~9% | Storefront fixtures + commercial finishes drive 5-year share higher |
Source: Cost Seg Smart cost segregation engine, Miami neighborhood calibration. Per-type ranges reflect typical Miami builds; individual properties vary based on year built, finish level, and FF&E density.
Land allocation by Miami neighborhood
Land is non-depreciable, so the share of purchase price allocated to land directly determines what's available to reclassify. Miami runs a wide range — luxury Coconut Grove pushes 38%; inland Hialeah and Doral stay ~18%. These ratios are Miami-Dade Property Appraiser-typical based on 2024–2026 records:
| Neighborhood / area | Typical land % | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Brickell (33131) | 36% | Tower-density financial district, condo-heavy |
| Wynwood (33127) | 28% | Post-2010 warehouse-redevelopment art district |
| Edgewater (33137) | 32% | Bayfront condo + townhome corridor |
| Coconut Grove (33133) | 38% | Luxury established, large lots, mature canopy |
| Coral Gables (33134) | 35% | Luxury established, City Beautiful master plan |
| South Beach / Miami Beach (33139) | 34% | Historic Art Deco district, STR-restricted zones |
| Little Havana (33135) | 22% | Older inland residential, Calle Ocho corridor |
| Other Miami (Doral, Kendall, Hialeah) | 18% | Suburban / workforce baseline |
Source: Miami-Dade Property Appraiser (miamidade.gov/pa) typical ratios, 2024–2026 records.
Cost segregation study pricing in Miami (2026)
| Purchase price | Residential / STR / condo | MF 2-4 unit | Commercial / MF 5+ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under $300K | $495 | — | — |
| $300K–$700K | $795 | $995 | $995 |
| $700K–$1M | $895 | $995 | $995 |
| $1M–$2M | $1,295 | $1,395 | $1,395 |
| $2M–$5M | $1,595 | $1,695 | $1,895 |
| $5M–$15M | $1,895 | $1,995 | $2,495 |
Cost Seg Smart automated provider pricing as of May 2026. Traditional engineering firms typically quote $5,000–$15,000 for the same property. Methodology is identical; labor model differs. See costsegregationreviews.com for customer reviews of Miami-area providers.
Three Miami properties, full math
Engine-truth outputs assuming 2025 placed-in-service, 100% bonus depreciation under OBBBA, 37% federal bracket.
1. Wynwood 3BR Townhouse Airbnb — $725K STR
| Purchase price | $725,000 |
| Land allocation (Miami-Dade Wynwood typical) | $203,000 (28.0%) |
| Depreciable basis | $522,000 |
| Reclassified 5-year (FF&E + interior finishes) | $110,000 |
| Reclassified 7-year | $3,000 |
| Reclassified 15-year (site work) | $30,000 |
| Total accelerated reclassification | $143,000 (27.4% of basis) |
| Year-1 deduction (100% bonus) | $143,000 |
| Year-1 federal tax savings (37% bracket) | $53,029 |
| Study fee | $895 |
| ROI on study fee | 59.2× |
2. Edgewater Fourplex — $1.35M LTR
| Purchase price | $1,350,000 |
| Land allocation (Miami-Dade Edgewater typical) | $432,000 (32.0%) |
| Depreciable basis | $918,000 |
| Reclassified 5-year | $118,000 |
| Reclassified 7-year | $0 |
| Reclassified 15-year | $61,000 |
| Total accelerated reclassification | $179,000 (19.5% of basis) |
| Year-1 deduction (100% bonus) | $179,000 |
| Year-1 federal tax savings (37% bracket) | $66,267 |
| Study fee | $1,395 |
| ROI on study fee | 47.5× |
3. Brickell Office Building — $2.8M commercial
| Purchase price | $2,800,000 |
| Land allocation (Miami-Dade Brickell typical) | $1,008,000 (36.0%) |
| Depreciable basis | $1,792,000 |
| Reclassified 5-year | $304,640 |
| Reclassified 7-year | $26,880 |
| Reclassified 15-year | $163,520 |
| Total accelerated reclassification | $495,040 (27.6% of basis) |
| Year-1 deduction (100% bonus) | $495,040 |
| Year-1 federal tax savings (37% bracket) | $183,165 |
| Study fee | $1,895 |
| ROI on study fee | 96.7× |
Why Miami produces above-national-average cost-seg ROI
- No Florida state income tax. Federal cost-seg savings are the entire benefit. No decoupling math, no state addback, no parallel state schedule. Compared to California or New York, where state-level §168(k) decoupling requires a parallel state schedule, Florida is among the cleanest cost-seg jurisdictions in the country.
- Year-round international tourism. Art Basel (December), Ultra Music Festival (March), Formula 1 Miami GP (May), Miami Open (March-April), Latin American + European seasonal tourism. Premium FF&E loadouts compete on event-week and high-season pricing — designer furnishings, premium audio, hurricane-rated outdoor amenities — all 5-year personal property under MACRS. Miami STR FF&E density typically runs $40,000–$80,000 per property.
- Sweet-spot construction era. Brickell tower density 2010-2024, Edgewater bayfront 2010-2024, Wynwood warehouse redevelopment 2010-2020, Mid-Beach 2008-2020. Modern construction with code-current HVAC, electrical, fire suppression, smart-building systems all classify as 5/7-year property — not 27.5/39-year structural shell.
- Hurricane-code premium systems. Florida's 2002+ Building Code mandates impact-rated glazing, premium HVAC with surge protection, hardened electrical, continuous-load roofing. While the structural shell stays 27.5/39-year, the premium mechanical systems push 5/7-year reclassification 1-2 percentage points above non-coastal markets.
Florida tax context
Florida has no state personal income tax. The federal Year-1 cost-seg deduction is the entire Year-1 tax benefit — there's no parallel state schedule to maintain. Property tax in Miami-Dade is moderate (effective ~1.0% of market value for non-homestead residential), and Save Our Homes 3% cap + 10% non-homestead cap limit annual property-tax growth. Property-tax level doesn't change federal depreciable basis.
Compared to Nashville and Austin: similar tax structure (no state income tax), but Miami's year-round international tourism drives higher consistent STR FF&E demand. Compared to Atlanta: Miami is materially better for cost-seg ROI because Georgia has 5.49% state income tax. For cross-state comparison, see Cost Segregation Benchmarks 2026.
Miami Beach STR context (and why it doesn't break cost seg)
Miami Beach Section 142-905 governs short-term rental operations, restricting STR to specific RM-1, RM-2, RM-3 zones (essentially banning STR in single-family residential zones since 2018, with limited exceptions). The City of Miami proper has different, less restrictive rules. Miami-Dade County has its own framework.
However: Local STR zoning eligibility does not affect federal depreciation. The IRS depreciable basis is your acquisition cost from the closing disclosure plus subsequent capital improvements minus land value — none of these change based on local STR permit status. Even owners forced to convert from STR to LTR or annual lease still capture cost-seg benefit. The FF&E that no longer functions as STR personal property gets reduced (you'd remove non-affixed furniture from the next study), but 5/7/15-year structural component reclassification stays intact. LTR cost seg in Miami reclassifies 19% of basis vs 28% for STR — meaningfully different, but still a positive return on the study cost.
Data license & suggested citation
This page and its underlying dataset are licensed Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0).
Cost Seg Smart Research. (2026). Miami Cost Segregation Statistics 2026: Year-1 Federal Savings, Reclassification %, and Pricing. https://miamicostseg.com/data/miami-cost-seg-stats/
For journalists, CPAs, and tax professionals
Need custom Miami data slices, additional neighborhood breakdowns, or methodology details for citation? We respond within 1 hour during business hours PT.
- This page is openly citable under CC-BY 4.0 — no permission needed.
- National benchmarks dataset (260 anonymized studies): costsegsmart.com/research/benchmarks-2026/
- National pricing market survey: costsegregationpricing.com
- Customer reviews of cost-seg providers: costsegregationreviews.com
- Other city benchmarks: Nashville, Austin
Email hello@costsegsmart.com for interview requests, custom data slices, or to verify methodology details.
Frequently asked
What's the typical Year-1 federal tax savings on a $700K Miami short-term rental?
Approximately $52,500 at a 37% federal bracket with 100% bonus depreciation under OBBBA (2025+). The math: $700K × 72% (after typical 28% Wynwood land allocation) = $504K depreciable basis × 28.2% accelerated reclassification = $142K reclassified into 5/7/15-year MACRS classes × 100% bonus × 37% bracket = $52,540.
What's the average land allocation in Miami for cost segregation?
18% to 38% depending on neighborhood, per Miami-Dade Property Appraiser records. Brickell ~36%, Wynwood ~28%, Edgewater ~32%, Coconut Grove ~38%, Coral Gables ~35%, South Beach ~34%, Little Havana ~22%, Other Miami ~18%.
How much does a cost segregation study cost in Miami in 2026?
$495 (under $300K), $795 ($300K–$700K), $895 ($700K–$1M), $1,295 ($1M–$2M), $1,595 ($2M–$5M), $1,895 ($5M–$15M) for residential. Multifamily 2–4: $995–$1,995. Commercial: $995–$2,995. Most Miami residential lands in the $895 or $1,295 tier.
Why does Miami produce above-average cost-seg savings?
Florida no state income tax + year-round international tourism (Art Basel / Ultra / F1 / Miami Open) drives STR FF&E density + Brickell/Edgewater 2010-2024 condo boom hits sweet-spot construction era + Florida 2002+ Building Code mandates premium hurricane-resistant systems classified as 5/7-year property.
Does Miami Beach's STR ban affect cost segregation?
No. Miami Beach Section 142-905 restricts STR operations to specific RM zones, but does not affect federal depreciation. Owners forced to convert from STR to LTR still capture cost-seg benefit at LTR (~19%) reclassification rather than STR (~28%).
Does Miami-Dade reassessment affect cost segregation?
No. Miami-Dade Property Appraiser annual reassessments affect property tax (your TRIM notice and tax bill), not the IRS basis used for federal cost segregation. Your cost-seg basis is your acquisition cost from the closing disclosure plus subsequent capital improvements minus land value.
What sources support these statistics?
Engine-truth outputs from the Cost Seg Smart cost segregation engine; Miami-Dade Property Appraiser (miamidade.gov/pa) for land allocation; Florida Department of Revenue for tax context; BLS Producer Price Index for time-index cost adjustment. Methodology details and full national calibration dataset (260 anonymized studies) at costsegsmart.com/research/benchmarks-2026/.
Last reviewed: May 12, 2026. Maintained by Cost Seg Smart Research. Data is informational and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Cost segregation outcomes depend on property characteristics, ownership structure, and personal tax situation. Consult a qualified CPA, tax attorney, or enrolled agent before filing. Miami-Dade Property Appraiser, RSMeans, IRS publication titles, and Miami Beach code references are trademarks/properties of their respective holders. Cost Seg Smart is not affiliated with the Internal Revenue Service.