Cost Segregation for a Newly Acquired MHP vs a Park You’ve Owned for Years
Cost Segregation for a Newly Acquired MHP vs a Park You’ve Owned for Years
One of the most common scenarios we see at The MHP Accountant® is an MHP owner who has held a park for several years — depreciating it on the default schedule a generalist CPA set up at closing — and who is now discovering that accelerated depreciation was an option from day one.
The follow-up question is always: “Is it too late? Can I still do something?”
The answer is yes — but the mechanics, timing, and economics differ meaningfully from what would have been available at acquisition. This post compares the two scenarios side by side so you understand exactly what you can do, what it costs, and which path produces the better financial result.
Scenario 1: New Acquisition — The Ideal Window
Performing a cost segregation study at the time of acquisition — in the year you buy the park — is the highest-value scenario. Several factors converge that make it the optimal timing.
Bonus depreciation at acquisition-year rates. The applicable bonus depreciation percentage depends on when property is placed in service. When you purchase a park, the year of acquisition establishes the rate available for bonus-eligible assets. If that year’s bonus rate is higher than what will be available in future years due to the phase-down schedule, you capture the benefit of the higher rate by doing the study in the acquisition year.
Clean Form 8594 allocation. When you purchase a park in an asset transaction, both buyer and seller file Form 8594 (Asset Acquisition Statement) documenting the purchase price allocation among asset classes. The cost segregation study informs the correct allocation on Form 8594 — ensuring that the right amounts are assigned to 5-year personal property (POHs), 15-year land improvements, 27.5-year structures, and non-depreciable land. A well-executed Form 8594 creates a clean, documented foundation for your entire depreciation strategy.
No catch-up complexity. In the acquisition year, you are simply establishing the depreciation schedule for the first time. There is no change in accounting method, no Form 3115, no calculation of a prior-year adjustment. The study findings are incorporated directly into your first-year return.
Maximum time-value benefit. The earlier you take accelerated deductions, the more time-value benefit you receive. A $500,000 deduction in Year 1 is worth more — in present value terms — than the same deduction in Year 3 or Year 5.
Ideally, the cost segregation study should be initiated at or shortly after closing — not as an afterthought when you are preparing the first-year return. Why? Because the engineer needs the closing documents, the purchase price allocation, and ideally access to the property for a site visit. By the time you are sitting across from your accountant preparing the Year 1 return, filing deadline pressure can push you into accepting the default straight-line schedule “just to get the return filed on time.” Committing to the study in the first 60–90 days after closing gives the engineer time to do the work properly, and ensures the results are ready when you need them.
What to Document at Acquisition
For a new acquisition, the documentation package for the cost segregation study typically includes:
- Closing statement and HUD-1 or equivalent settlement statement
- Purchase price allocation (Form 8594 draft or agreed allocation)
- Appraisal of the property if available
- Survey and site plan
- Prior owner’s depreciation schedules (if obtainable)
- Construction records or improvement documentation if available
- List and inventory of park-owned homes, with titling information
The more complete the documentation package, the more accurate and defensible the study. Parks acquired at auction or from estates — where documentation is often limited — require the engineer to rely more heavily on on-site observation and cost estimation, which introduces more variability into the results.
Scenario 2: Existing Ownership — The Lookback Study
If you have owned your MHP for one or more years and depreciated it on the default straight-line or incorrect schedule, you have not permanently forfeited the accelerated depreciation you should have been claiming. You can recapture the difference through a process called a lookback cost segregation study, implemented through IRS Form 3115.
Here is how it works: A cost segregation engineer performs the same analysis they would have performed at acquisition — reviewing the property, identifying reclassifiable assets, and allocating the purchase price among MACRS categories. The study produces the same asset schedule it would have produced at closing.
The difference is what happens with the results. Rather than setting up a depreciation schedule going forward, the study calculates the cumulative difference between the depreciation you should have claimed under the reclassified schedule vs. what you actually claimed under the original (default) schedule. This difference — the cumulative “catch-up” — is called a Section 481(a) adjustment.
The Section 481(a) adjustment is claimed in its entirety in the year the Form 3115 is filed. You do not amend prior-year returns. You do not go back and refile three years of returns. The entire catch-up deduction flows through your current-year return as a single adjustment. This is a well-established, IRS-approved procedure that has been used extensively by real estate owners.
IRS Form 3115 (Application for Change in Accounting Method) is the procedural vehicle for implementing a lookback cost segregation study. Certain accounting method changes are filed as “automatic” changes (no IRS consent required, only filing compliance), while others require advance consent. Cost segregation lookback studies are typically implemented as automatic changes, provided the requirements are met. Your MHP tax advisor prepares the Form 3115 alongside your tax return, calculates the 481(a) adjustment, and ensures all procedural requirements are satisfied. The form itself is complex and requires specific tax expertise — this is not a DIY filing. See IRS guidance on Form 3115 at IRS.gov for the procedural framework.
The Key Differences: New Acquisition vs Lookback Study
| Factor | New Acquisition Study | Lookback (Existing Ownership) Study |
|---|---|---|
| Timing | Year of acquisition or shortly after | Any subsequent year of ownership |
| Procedural mechanism | Direct depreciation schedule, incorporated in Year 1 return | Form 3115 change in accounting method; Section 481(a) catch-up adjustment |
| Bonus depreciation rate | Rate in effect in year of acquisition (when property placed in service) | Rate in effect in year the study is performed may differ from acquisition year — only regular MACRS catch-up, not bonus on prior years (generally) |
| Complexity | Moderate — integrates with Year 1 return | Higher — requires Form 3115, 481(a) calculation, coordination with prior schedules |
| Documentation | Full access to fresh acquisition documents | Requires reconstruction from older records; may require more engineering estimation |
| Time-value benefit | Maximum — deductions taken as early as possible | Reduced — catch-up deduction is taken later; prior-year benefit was foregone |
| Form 8594 interaction | Informs original allocation, creates clean baseline | Must work within existing Form 8594 allocation if already filed |
| Study cost | Comparable to lookback | Comparable to new study; sometimes higher for older properties with limited documentation |
| Prior year returns | Not affected | Not amended — catch-up in current year only |
The Bonus Depreciation Problem with Lookback Studies
This is the most important practical difference between the two scenarios, and it deserves clear explanation.
When you identify reclassifiable assets through a lookback study, the catch-up deduction you claim is for the difference in regular MACRS depreciation — not bonus depreciation — for the prior years you held the property. The catch-up represents what straight-line MACRS depreciation would have been on the reclassified assets from acquisition through the current year, less what you actually claimed.
The bonus depreciation you would have been entitled to in the year of acquisition — by immediately expensing the reclassified assets at the then-applicable bonus rate — is generally not recoverable through a lookback study. Bonus depreciation is tied to the year assets are placed in service, and that window has passed.
This means: if you acquired your park in a year when bonus depreciation was at a high rate, and you are now performing a lookback study several years later when bonus has phased down, you are receiving catch-up at regular MACRS rates rather than the bonus rate you could have claimed at acquisition. The economics of the lookback study are real and meaningful — but they are less favorable than what a timely acquisition-year study would have produced.
When a Lookback Study Still Makes Strong Economic Sense
Despite the bonus depreciation limitation, lookback studies frequently produce substantial, near-term tax benefits. The Section 481(a) catch-up adjustment can be a very large number — representing years of accumulated difference between accelerated and straight-line depreciation on reclassified assets. For a park you have owned for five or more years, this catch-up can represent hundreds of thousands of dollars in deductions claimed in a single year.
The question, as always, is whether you have the taxable income to absorb the deduction. If this is a high-income year — from park operations, other business income, or a significant event creating income — a large lookback adjustment can be strategically valuable. Your MHP accountant should analyze your tax situation and identify the year in which the lookback study produces the greatest current benefit.
For owners who have recently qualified as real estate professionals, or who have generated passive income through portfolio growth, a lookback study can unlock deductions that were sitting dormant in the depreciation schedule for years.
Planning Implications: Why the Acquisition Year Matters
The core lesson of this comparison is that the acquisition year is the highest-leverage point for cost segregation planning. Every year you delay the study after acquisition, you are foregoing time-value benefit and potentially foregoing bonus depreciation eligibility at a higher phase-in rate.
If you are acquiring a park now, the time to plan your cost segregation strategy is at closing — ideally in the weeks before closing, as part of your pre-acquisition due diligence. Your MHP-specialized tax advisor should be part of that process, not brought in after the fact to “clean up” a depreciation schedule that was set up without MHP expertise.
Understanding the full cost segregation picture — including bonus depreciation interaction, recapture at sale, and the POH-specific rules — is essential context for this decision. See our guide to cost segregation and bonus depreciation, our analysis of recapture at sale, and our straight-line vs cost segregation comparison for the complete framework.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far back can a lookback cost segregation study go?
Do I need to amend prior tax returns to implement a lookback study?
Can I claim bonus depreciation on a lookback cost segregation study?
What if I already have a depreciation schedule from a prior accountant — can I still do a lookback study?
Can I do a cost segregation study on improvements I made after acquiring the park?
Whether You Just Bought or Have Owned for Years — We Can Help
The MHP Accountant® handles both acquisition-year cost segregation studies and lookback studies on parks you have owned for years. We know the Form 3115 procedure, the bonus depreciation mechanics, and how to maximize the catch-up in the right tax year.
Schedule a 30-minute call with Harry Shurek, EA to assess your cost segregation opportunity — new acquisition or existing park.
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Call or text: 844-PARK-TAX | info@themhpaccountant.com
Disclaimer: This post is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax laws change and individual circumstances vary. Consult a qualified tax professional before making any decisions based on information in this article. The MHP Accountant® is an enrolled agent firm; services do not include legal advice.
About the Author
Harry Shurek, EA
Harry Shurek is an Enrolled Agent and founder of The MHP Accountant — the only CPA firm built exclusively for mobile home park owners. Learn more →