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Recapture Calculator

Depreciation Recapture Calculator

See how a property sale splits into a recaptured portion taxed at up to 25% and a capital-gain portion at 0/15/20% — and the blended rate on your whole gain.

Jerry Baker · Updated June 2026 · Free interactive tool
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Your numbers

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Amount realized minus your adjusted basis. Use the capital gains calculator if you need to find it.

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Cumulative depreciation claimed while you owned the property.

Recapture is taxed at your ordinary rate, capped at 25%.

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Your estimate

Enter your numbers and select Calculate to see your estimate.
How it works

Why one sale is taxed at two rates

When you sell a depreciated property, the IRS splits your gain in two. The part that simply reflects appreciation is taxed at the favorable long-term capital-gains rate. But the part that exists because you took depreciation — the "unrecaptured Section 1250 gain" — is taxed at your ordinary rate, capped at 25%.

  • Recapture comes first. Up to the total depreciation you claimed is treated as recapture; only gain beyond that is capital gain.
  • It can dominate the bill. On a long-held, heavily depreciated building, the recapture layer is often larger than the appreciation layer.
  • It's deferrable. A 1031 exchange carries the recapture forward into the replacement property rather than triggering it.

For the full picture including the 3.8% NIIT and federal bracket stacking, use the capital gains tax calculator, and read the memo on depreciation recapture.

This tool is for general educational purposes only. It produces a simplified estimate, not tax advice, and omits many situational rules (stacking with other income, AMT, state-specific treatment, partial-year and like-kind nuances). Your actual tax depends on your full return. Always confirm with your CPA before acting.