Hochatown cabin engine outputs run 24–30% reclassification ratios — higher than Tahoe, Gatlinburg, or Destin. Here's why, with per-fixture engine data and the cost-seg playbook for Texas weekend buyers.
Before the analysis: the underlying numbers this post draws on come from 5 Broken Bow-area properties run through the Cost Seg Smart engine — same engine that produces real customer studies. Median Year-1 federal savings is $44,678 at the 37% top marginal bracket with 100% bonus depreciation. Reclassification ratio ranges 16.8% to 26.5%.
Hochatown — the unincorporated cabin corridor immediately north of Broken Bow proper, adjacent to Beavers Bend State Park — has become one of the fastest-growing STR markets in the country over the past five years, driven almost entirely by Dallas-Fort Worth weekend traffic and the lower entry price point relative to mountain-and-coastal alternatives. From a cost-segregation standpoint, the Broken Bow / Hochatown market sits in an unusual structural position.The structural advantage is the local cabin construction profile. Post-2017 new-build cabins in Hochatown are dense with the components the engine reclassifies most aggressively: oversized covered decks with hot tubs, gravel drives...
The remainder of this section drills into the specifics that matter for comparison local data. The five fixtures we ran through the engine for Broken Bow span $325,000 to $725,000 in purchase price across 5 distinct sub-markets — enough variance to draw real conclusions about which scenarios actually produce cost-seg ROI in this market.
Take the Hochatown New-Build Cabin as our anchor example. Purchase price: $495,000. Built 2021, 2200 sqft, SFR operating as a short-term rental, located in Hochatown.
The engine determined land allocation of 14.6% using statistical methodology, producing a depreciable basis of $422,878. Of that, the engine reclassified $84,405 into 5-year personal property (FF&E, decorative finishes, certain electrical), $25,462 into 15-year land improvements (paving, landscaping, hardscape, site lighting), and the rest into the 27.5-Year Residential Real Property structural category.
That produces a total reclassification ratio of 26.5%. At 100% bonus depreciation and a 37% federal marginal bracket, the illustrative Year-1 federal tax savings is $41,393. That's the headline number for this fixture.
Contrast that with Beavers Bend Forest Cabin: $565,000 in Beavers Bend State Park corridor, built 2019. Here the engine produced a reclassification ratio of 26.2% — lower than the previous example.
Why? Two reasons. First, the land allocation profile is different — 13.7% here versus 14.6% for the previous example. Second, the engine's treatment of sfr as a furnished short-term rental interacts with the build-year and FF&E density differently across neighborhoods.
The takeaway: in Broken Bow, the per-fixture variance is real. A median number (26.2% reclass) hides meaningful variation across sub-markets and property archetypes.
Oklahoma partially decouples from federal §168(k) — the state historically allowed only 80% of federal bonus depreciation, with the 20% remainder added back on the Oklahoma return. For 2025+ acquisitions under OBBBA's 100% federal bonus, the practical effect is that roughly 20% of the federal bonus deduction is added back to your Oklahoma taxable income in Year 1 and depreciated on the regular MACRS schedule for state purposes. Net effect on a typical Broken Bow cabin owner: the headline federal-savings figure overstates total tax savings by 1–2 percentage points of the accelerated reclassification amount.
Decoupling: Verify current-year Oklahoma conformity treatment with your CPA — Oklahoma's bonus-addback methodology has been adjusted multiple times in the past five years and may change again. The federal deduction itself is unaffected; only the Oklahoma-side reconciliation moves.
This affects every cost-seg calculation in Broken Bow. Because Oklahoma doesn't fully conform, the federal Year-1 figure shown above is only the federal-only portion. The state benefit is smaller (or different) and your CPA will need to manage the addback at filing time.
McCurtain County and Hochatown are among the most STR-permissive jurisdictions in the United States. Hochatown itself is unincorporated, so there's no municipal zoning restriction on short-term rental operation — Oklahoma state-level tourism registration and lodging tax remittance apply but the regulatory burden is minimal compared to municipalities with VHR permit caps (Tahoe, Joshua Tree, Austin). McCurtain County requires a lodging tax collection registration but does not currently cap STR density or limit operations by zone. The bigger regulatory risk is local — informal community pushback and county-level discussions about future regulation have surfaced periodically as cabin density has increased. Buyers should model conservative hold-period assumptions accordingly. Material participation under §469 is achievable for self-managing operators given the relatively low density of full-service property managers in the market; many Hochatown owners self-coordinate via apps like Hospitable or OwnerRez and clear the >100-hour test reasonably easily.
To run this analysis for your specific Broken Bow property: the same engine, with your address, year built, square footage, and renovation history. Studies start at $495 for residential under $300K. Audit defense is included with every Cost Seg Smart study.
To run this analysis for your specific Broken Bow property: the same engine, with your address, year built, square footage, and renovation history. Studies start at $495 for residential under $300K. Audit defense is included with every Cost Seg Smart study.