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Everything You Need to Know About 1031 Exchanges

💼 Everything You Need to Know About 1031 Exchanges


Now includes how foreign investors and non-U.S. citizens can participate (and when they can’t).


🏠 What Is a 1031 Exchange?

A 1031 Exchange (from Section 1031 of the IRS tax code) lets real estate investors delay paying capital gains taxes when selling an investment or business property — as long as they reinvest all proceeds into another like-kind investment property of equal or greater value.


In short: you sell one investment property, buy another, and postpone paying the taxes on your profits.


💰 Why Investors Use It

  • Delay paying capital gains taxes

  • Keep more equity working for you

  • Trade up to bigger or better properties

  • Diversify into different markets or property types

  • Simplify your portfolio

  • Pass wealth to heirs with a step-up in basis (tax reset)


🔑 Basic Rules to Qualify

1. Property Use

Both the property you sell and the one you buy must be for investment or business use — not a home you live in.


2. Like-Kind Property

You must exchange real estate for real estate.

Examples:

  • Rental home → apartment building

  • Land → commercial building

  • Industrial → retail

You cannot exchange into stocks, REITs, or personal items.


3. Use a Qualified Intermediary (QI)

You can’t touch the money from the sale. A QI must hold the funds and coordinate the exchange.


4. Timeline Rules

  • 45 days after your sale to identify replacement properties (in writing).

  • 180 days after your sale to close on the new property.

  • Both deadlines start the day you close the sale.


5. Equal or Greater Value

To defer all taxes, reinvest all proceeds and take on equal or greater debt.

If you take cash out or reduce your loan, that difference (called “boot”) is taxable.


6. Title Must Match

Whoever sells the property must also be the one buying the replacement.


🌎 Out-of-State Exchanges


You can exchange property between different U.S. states — all U.S. real estate is considered like-kind.

However, if you sell California property and buy outside the state:

You must file FTB Form 3840 every year until the deferred gain is reported.

When you finally sell the out-of-state property (without another exchange), California will tax the original deferred gain.

In short: you can move your money, but California will still collect taxes later.


🌍 Foreign Investors and Non-U.S. Citizens


Foreign investors can do 1031 exchanges — but the process has extra steps.


1. FIRPTA (Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act)


When a foreign seller sells U.S. property, the buyer must normally withhold 15% of the sales price for the IRS.

However, in a 1031 exchange, this withholding can be reduced or deferred if:

  • The exchange is structured correctly, and

  • The seller files IRS Form 8288-B (Withholding Certificate) through their QI.

2. Ownership and Property Rules

The property sold and bought must be U.S. real property.

You cannot exchange:

  • U.S. property → foreign property

  • Foreign property → U.S. property

  • Only U.S.-to-U.S. exchanges qualify under Section 1031.


3. Documentation

Foreign investors must have:

  • A U.S. Tax ID (ITIN or EIN)

  • A U.S.-based Qualified Intermediary familiar with FIRPTA compliance


4. Taxes Later

When the replacement property is eventually sold (without another exchange), normal capital gains and FIRPTA withholding will apply.


Summary:

Foreign investors can use 1031 exchanges for U.S. properties, but not between U.S. and foreign assets. Proper paperwork and a qualified intermediary are essential.





🧾 Tax Notes

  • 1031 exchanges defer both capital gains and depreciation recapture taxes.

  • If you hold the property until death, your heirs can receive it with a step-up in basis, eliminating deferred gains.



⚠️ What Doesn’t Qualify

  1. Primary residences or vacation homes not rented out

  2. Short-term flips held for resale

  3. Partnership or LLC membership interests

  4. Stocks or personal property




💡 Pro Tips


  1. Hire your QI before closing escrow.

  2. Keep written proof of your property identifications.

  3. Work with professionals: QI, escrow, title, CPA, and tax attorney.

  4. Use 1031 exchanges repeatedly to keep deferring taxes and compounding wealth.


📈 Example


You sell a rental for $1.5M (bought for $800K, with $500K debt).

After paying off the loan, you net $1M.


➡️ Reinvest the full $1M into a new property worth $1.5M+ with similar debt, and no tax is due.

➡️ If you only reinvest $800K and keep $200K, taxes apply to that $200K “boot.”





💬 Summary


A 1031 Exchange is one of the most powerful tools for real estate investors — including foreign investors — to grow wealth tax-deferred.

By following IRS rules, using a qualified intermediary, and working with experienced professionals, you can preserve your capital


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