Tokenized real estate is one of the most compelling RWA categories on Solana. Platforms like Homebase let you own fractional shares of rental properties, while Parcl gives you exposure to real estate price indices. But unlike tokenized bonds or equities, real estate has a unique tax feature that most crypto holders overlook entirely: depreciation.
Depreciation is a tax deduction that allows you to recover the cost of an income-producing asset over its useful life. For physical real estate, the IRS (and equivalents in AU, UK, and CA) recognizes that buildings wear out over time and allows you to deduct a portion of the cost each year. This reduces your taxable income — sometimes significantly. And yes, it applies to tokenized real estate too.
What Is MACRS?
MACRS — the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System — is the depreciation method required for most tangible property in the United States. It was established by the Tax Reform Act of 1986 and is codified in IRS Publication 946.
The key concept: MACRS assigns every depreciable asset to a recovery period (the number of years over which you depreciate it) and provides exact percentage tables for how much you deduct each year. You don't choose your own rate — the IRS tells you exactly what percentage of the cost to deduct in year 1, year 2, and so on.
For real estate specifically, there are two recovery periods. Residential rental property uses a 27.5-year recovery period — this means you deduct approximately 3.636% of the building's cost per year for 27.5 years. Nonresidential (commercial) real property uses a 39-year recovery period, working out to about 2.564% per year.
An important distinction: you only depreciate the building, not the land. If you buy a tokenized property for $100,000 and the land is valued at $20,000, your depreciable basis is $80,000. The land value never depreciates.
How the MACRS Tables Work
MACRS uses the General Depreciation System (GDS) with a half-year convention for most personal property. The half-year convention assumes you placed the asset in service at the midpoint of the year, regardless of when you actually acquired it. This means your first-year deduction is half of a full year's amount, and you get an extra partial year at the end.
For a residential rental property with a 27.5-year life, the math looks like this: 3.636% per year for 27 full years, then 1.818% in the final partial year. On an $80,000 depreciable basis, that's $2,909 per year in deductions — real money that offsets your rental income.
For equipment and furniture within a property (appliances, HVAC systems, carpeting), MACRS uses shorter recovery periods with accelerated front-loading. A 5-year asset gives you 20% in year 1, 32% in year 2, 19.2% in year 3, and so on. A 7-year asset starts at 14.29% and 24.49%. The acceleration means bigger deductions in early years, which many investors prefer for cash flow reasons.
The IRS publishes these percentages in Table A-1 of Publication 946. You don't need to calculate them — just look up your recovery period and apply the percentages to your cost basis. SolanaRWA has these tables built in, so the math is automatic.
A Worked Example
Say you purchase a fractional interest in a residential rental property via Homebase for $50,000. The property allocates 80% to the building and 20% to land. Your depreciable basis is $40,000.
Under MACRS with a 27.5-year residential recovery period: Year 1 gives you $1,454 in depreciation (3.636% of $40,000). Years 2 through 27 each give you $1,454. Year 28 gives you $727 (the half-year convention's final partial year). Total depreciation over 27.5 years: $40,000 — you've recovered your entire building cost.
If you also have $5,000 in appliances that came with the property, those depreciate on a 5-year schedule: Year 1 is $1,000 (20%), Year 2 is $1,600 (32%), Year 3 is $960 (19.2%), Year 4 is $576 (11.52%), Year 5 is $576 (11.52%), and Year 6 is $288 (5.76%). The accelerated schedule front-loads $2,600 of deductions in the first two years alone.
Combined, your first-year depreciation deduction is $2,454 ($1,454 building + $1,000 equipment). If your tokenized property generates $4,000 in annual rental income, your taxable rental income after depreciation is only $1,546. That's a significant reduction.
How Other Jurisdictions Handle Depreciation
If you're not a US taxpayer, your jurisdiction has its own depreciation system. The principles are similar — deducting asset cost over time — but the methods, rates, and rules differ meaningfully.
Australia uses the diminishing value method as its default. The rate is calculated as 200% divided by the useful life. For a property with a 40-year effective life, the annual rate is 5%, applied to the written-down (book) value each year. Unlike MACRS's fixed percentages, this creates a declining deduction curve — larger deductions in early years that taper off. Australian holders can alternatively elect straight-line depreciation, which spreads the deduction evenly.
The United Kingdom uses the reducing balance method through its capital allowances system. The standard rate is 18% per year for plant and machinery (the main pool), or 6% for long-life assets and special rate items. Property structures qualify for the Structures and Buildings Allowance (SBA) at 3% straight-line. The Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) can fully expense qualifying expenditure up to the annual limit in the first year.
Canada uses the Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) system, which groups assets into prescribed classes. Real estate buildings typically fall into Class 1 (4% declining balance) or Class 3 (5% declining balance for pre-1988 buildings). Canada's half-year rule means you can only claim 50% of the CCA in the year you acquire the asset. The declining balance calculation means you never fully depreciate to zero — you asymptotically approach it.
Why This Matters for Tokenized Properties
Depreciation on tokenized real estate works the same as depreciation on physical real estate you own directly. The tokenization doesn't change the tax treatment — what matters is the economic substance: you own a share of a real property that generates income and wears out over time.
But here's where most tokenized property holders get stuck: no crypto tax tool calculates depreciation. Koinly doesn't. CoinTracker doesn't. CoinLedger doesn't. They see your Homebase token as just another crypto holding, not as a fractional interest in a depreciable real property. You're leaving deductions on the table.
The gap is even wider for holders across multiple jurisdictions. A US holder needs MACRS schedules. An Australian holder needs diminishing value calculations. A Canadian holder needs CCA class lookups. Each method produces different annual deductions from the same asset — and applying the wrong method to the wrong jurisdiction is a compliance problem.
Depreciation Recapture: The Flip Side
There's an important caveat that every property holder should understand: depreciation recapture. When you sell (dispose of) a depreciated asset, the IRS requires you to "recapture" previous depreciation deductions as ordinary income. For real property, this is taxed at a maximum rate of 25% under Section 1250.
Example: you bought a tokenized property for $50,000, claimed $10,000 in total depreciation, and later sell for $55,000. Your adjusted basis is $40,000 ($50,000 minus $10,000 depreciation). Your total gain is $15,000. Of that, $10,000 is depreciation recapture (taxed at up to 25%), and $5,000 is capital gain (taxed at your long-term capital gains rate if held over a year).
Recapture also applies in AU, UK, and CA with similar mechanics (called a balancing adjustment, balancing charge, or recapture of CCA respectively). The principle is the same: you benefited from deductions during ownership, and the tax authority claws some back when you sell for more than your depreciated basis.
This doesn't make depreciation a bad deal — the time value of money means deductions today are worth more than tax payments tomorrow. But it does mean you need to track your accumulated depreciation carefully for the eventual disposal calculation.
Setting Up Your Depreciation Schedule
SolanaRWA calculates depreciation schedules automatically for all five methods: MACRS (US), diminishing value (AU), reducing balance (UK), CCA (CA), and straight-line (universal fallback). When you register a real estate asset, select your region and the system recommends the standard method for your jurisdiction.
You'll need three inputs: the acquisition cost (how much you paid for the tokenized property), the salvage value (estimated residual value — often set to the land component or zero for simplicity), and the useful life in years (27.5 for US residential, 39 for US commercial, or your jurisdiction's standard).
The dashboard generates a year-by-year schedule showing opening book value, annual depreciation amount, accumulated depreciation, and closing book value. When you generate a tax report, the depreciation schedule for each property is included automatically — formatted for your jurisdiction with the correct method applied.
If you hold tokenized real estate and haven't set up a depreciation schedule, you're likely missing a legitimate tax deduction. It's one of the few areas where crypto actually gives you a better tax outcome than cash — and the only tool that handles it properly for Solana RWA holders is one built for exactly this purpose.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Depreciation rules are complex and fact-specific. Consult a qualified tax professional before claiming depreciation deductions.