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What Is Real Estate Depreciation? Thorough Explanation of Statutory Useful Life Calculation Methods

Explains real estate depreciation and statutory useful life. Covers 3 types of useful life, useful life by structure, calculation methods, and tax benefits from used property purchases.

About 1 min read

In real estate investment and sale, accurate understanding of depreciation and statutory useful life is essential knowledge for maximizing tax reduction effects. This article practically explains from the 3 ways of thinking about useful life to the calculation formulas for both when useful life has been exceeded and when it hasn't.

What Is Real Estate "Useful Life"? 3 Ways of Thinking

Real estate useful life comes in 3 types. In investment and taxation, statutory useful life is mainly used.

Physical Useful Life

Physical useful life is the number of years until a building becomes unusable due to deterioration. It refers to the period the structural mechanism and material quality can be sustained, close to the concept used for TVs and home appliances, with limited application to real estate.

Statutory Useful Life

Statutory useful life is the baseline number of years set by the national government under tax law to fairly calculate real estate value. There are no use restrictions even after exceeding this number, and it is used for fixed asset tax calculation and depreciation calculation. It is the most important indicator in real estate practice.

Economic Useful Life

Economic useful life is the period expected to generate profit from an income-producing property. It varies depending on location, usage conditions, and maintenance status, and is sometimes shorter than statutory useful life in properties with poor demand.

Statutory Useful Life by Structure Type

StructureStatutory Useful Life
RC (Reinforced Concrete)47 years
Light steel frame (3mm or less)19 years
Light steel frame (3-4mm)27 years
Wood frame22 years

Depreciation Calculation Method: When Useful Life Not Exceeded

Use the straight-line method: Acquisition cost × Depreciation rate. The depreciation rate is determined by the statutory useful life (e.g., 47 years → 0.022).

Depreciation Calculation Method: When Useful Life Exceeded

When statutory useful life is exceeded, a separately determined formula is used: Statutory useful life × 0.2. This is the "residual useful life" and becomes the basis for depreciation calculation.

Depreciation Points for Used Property Purchase

When purchasing a used property with remaining statutory useful life, the remaining useful life is the basis. For properties with exceeded useful life, statutory useful life × 0.2 is used. Used properties often have shorter useful life, enabling larger annual depreciation expenses and greater tax benefits.

FAQ

Q. Is depreciation possible for land?
A. Land cannot be depreciated. Only buildings are subject to depreciation.
Q. When does the depreciation period start?
A. Depreciation starts from the year the property is placed in service (the year it starts being used as rental property).
Q. What is the depreciation amount for a used RC condo with an exceeded useful life purchased for 30 million yen?
A. 47 years × 0.2 = 9.4 → rounded down to 9 years. If the building portion is 20 million yen, annual depreciation = 20 million × 0.112 = approximately 2.24 million yen.
Q. Does useful life end when statutory useful life is reached?
A. The building's physical life does not end. Statutory useful life is for tax purposes only, and the building can continue to be used.
Daisuke Inazawa, President & CEO of INA&Associates Inc.

Author

President & CEOINA&Associates Inc.

Daisuke Inazawa is the President and CEO of INA&Associates Inc., a Japanese real estate firm headquartered in Osaka with a Tokyo branch. He leads the company's three core businesses — real estate sales brokerage, rental leasing, and property management — across the Greater Tokyo Area and the Kansai region.

His areas of expertise include investment strategy for income-generating real estate, profitability optimisation of rental operations, real estate advisory for ultra-high-net-worth individuals (UHNWIs) and institutional investors, and cross-border real estate investment. He provides data-driven, long-horizon advisory to investors in Japan and overseas.

Under the management philosophy "a company's most important asset is its people," he positions INA&Associates as a "people-investment company" and is committed to sustainable corporate-value creation through talent development. He also writes and speaks publicly on leadership and organisational culture in times of change.

He holds eleven Japanese professional qualifications: Licensed Real Estate Broker (Takken), Certified Real Estate Consulting Master, Licensed Condominium Manager, Licensed Building Management Supervisor, Certified Rental Housing Management Professional, Gyōseishoshi Lawyer (administrative scrivener), Certified Personal Information Protection Officer, Class-A Fire Prevention Manager, Certified Auctioned Real Estate Specialist, Certified Condominium Maintenance Engineer, and Licensed Moneylending Operations Supervisor.

  • Licensed Real Estate Broker (Takken)
  • Certified Real Estate Consulting Master
  • Licensed Condominium Manager
  • Licensed Building Management Supervisor
  • Certified Rental Housing Management Professional
  • Gyōseishoshi Lawyer (Administrative Scrivener)
  • Certified Personal Information Protection Officer
  • Class-A Fire Prevention Manager
  • Certified Auctioned Real Estate Specialist
  • Certified Condominium Maintenance Engineer
  • Licensed Moneylending Operations Supervisor