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| What
You Need to Know to Teach a One Hour 1031 Exchange Class |
The
1031 Exchange area is so broad that you
could spend days teaching the details of the topic.
Most of you, however, want to simply introduce the
topic to your students, and you should be able to
do that adequately in about an hour. This article
gives you an outline and the basic concepts that
will let you do just that.
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by
Gary Gorman
Founding Partner,
The 1031 Exchange Experts |
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The
concept of a 1031 exchange is fairly simple: the
gain from the sale of the Old Property rolls over
to the New Property. As long as you continue to
do 1031 exchanges on each successive property, the
accumulated tax is postponed, until you ultimately
decide it's time to liquidate your investments.
While the correct technical terms are "relinquished
property" and "replacement property,"
I always use the terms "Old Property"
and "New Property" in my classes because
it takes too long for each student's brain to translate
'relinquished' and 'replacement', and as a result
they miss what I say in the next few moments after
I use those terms. 'Old' and 'New' are more familiar
words to describe the legal, technical terms (and
to be candid, it's hard even for me to keep 'relinquished'
and 'replacement' straight while I'm in the middle
of a lesson).
There
are six basic requirements for a 1031 exchange.
Teaching your students these basic requirements
will teach them about 95% of everything they will
ever need to know for a working knowledge about
exchanges. And not incidentally, these are the same
six things that the IRS looks at when they audit
an exchange.
Before
I start with the six things, let me point out that
Section 1031 is broken into two sets of rules: those
dealing with real estate (i.e., dirt and any thing
that is screwed into it such as buildings, trees,
rocks, water, etc.) and personal property (i.e.,
things that move such as jets, boats, trucks, cattle,
tables, chairs, etc.). The rules are very different
for real estate than they are for personal property.
Since you are real estate educators, this article
will address just those rules.
Rule
#1 - Both the Old Property and the New Property
must be held for investment or used in a trade or
business. It used to be that if you sold a purple duplex, you
had to find someone that also had a purple duplex
and the two of you swapped deeds. This was changed
during the late 70s and early 80s by T.J. Starker
in a series of Supreme Court cases (thereby giving
rise to the term "Starker Exchange").
In
1991 Congress rewrote Section 1031 and now you can
sell your purple duplex and buy any other type of
real estate, such as an office building, a warehouse,
an apartment building or even bare land, as long
as it too will be investment property for you or
used in your trade or business.
Section
1031 says that property held for re-sale does not
qualify for an exchange. This means that developers
and "fix 'n flip" properties do not qualify
for exchanges since the intent is resale rather
than the holding for investment. There have been
a number of court cases seeking to determine the
dividing line between held for resale and held for
investment. While intent is a significant factor
in determining the difference, the consensus of
the exchange industry is that a holding period of
a year and a day is a minimum time frame distinguishing
between the two. One of the primary reasons for
this is that it keeps taxpayers from turning short-term
capital gains into long-term capital gains by doing
an exchange.
Another
important part of this requirement is that you can
not sell your Old Property to, or buy your New Property
from, a related party. A "related party"
is defined as your parents, grandparents, spouse,
brothers & sisters, kids and grand kids. Thus,
Aunt Martha is not related to you for this rule.
There are similar rules for entities (e.g., corporations,
partnerships, LLCs, etc.) owned by a related party.
A
common question is whether the exchange property
can be located outside of the United States. The
answer is that if the Old Property is inside the
U.S., then the New Property must also be inside
the U.S. And if the Old Property is outside the
U.S., the New Property must be outside as well.
In other words, you can not cross U.S. borders with
your 1031 exchange.
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As
appeared in... |
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Volume
4, Number 1 |
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Rule
#2 - 45 day identification requirement.
From the day you close the sale of your Old Property,
you have 45 days to complete a list of properties you
want to buy. Typically this list will have 3 properties
or less. This is because you can list up to three properties
with no limitations. For example, if Fred & Sue
Investor sold their Old Property for $100,000, they
could list three properties for $10,000,000 each (a
total of thirty million) because there are no limitations.
If
your list has more than three properties, then the combined
purchase price of all of the properties on the list
can not exceed twice the selling price of the Old Property.
This is called the 200% rule. Going back to Fred &
Sue, if they put more than three properties on their
list (it does not matter if the list has 4 or 400 properties),
then the combined purchase price of all the properties
can not exceed $200,000 (i.e. twice the Old Property
selling price of $100,000). If you exceed the 200% limit,
your whole exchange
is disallowed. The common sense rule here is to keep
your list to three properties or less.
The
45 days are calendar days. That means that if the 45th
day falls on a Saturday or Sunday, or a holiday such
as the 4th of July, or New Years Day - that
is the final day: you must have your list completed
by midnight on that day - there are no exceptions or
extensions! If the IRS can prove that you changed your
list after the 45th day, you and your Qualified
Intermediary will go to prison (true!).
The
list is given to the Qualified Intermediary whose job
it is to receive the list on behalf of the IRS. See
Rule #4.
The
list has to be prepared in a way that an IRS agent could
take the list and go directly to the door of the property.
You want to list a property as "123 Main Street,
Anywhere, USA." An identification such as "a
three bedroom house on Main Street" won't work.
In other words, the 45 day list must be specific and
in writing.
Rule
#3 - 180 day purchase requirement.
This rule is pretty simple: again from the day of closing,
you have 180 days to close the purchase of what you
are going to buy, and what you buy has to be on your
45 day list. The 45 and 180 day requirements run concurrently
meaning that when the 45 days are up, you only have
135 days left to close. And like the 45 day identification
requirement, there are no extensions.
Closed
means that risk of loss has to pass to you. In other
words, title has to pass to you before the 180th
day.
Rule
#4 - Qualified Intermediary requirement.
You can not touch the money in between the sale of your
Old Property and the purchase of your New Property.
By law you have to use an independent third party to
handle the exchange.
The
function of the Intermediary is to prepare the documents
required by the IRS both at the time of the sale of
the Old Property and at the time of the purchase of
the New Property, and to hold the proceeds from the
sale until the purchase of the New Property.
If
the documents are not prepared correctly, the IRS will
disallow the exchange. Yes, they do disallow exchanges
for improper documents. Remember, the IRS loses a ton
of tax to Section 1031, so they check to make sure that
the documents are perfectly correct.
Section
1031 does not define who can be a Qualified Intermediary
- it defines who can NOT be an Intermediary (in other
words - who is disqualified). Included on the list of
disqualified persons: the taxpayer's attorney
and CPA, their realtor, any relative, any employee,
and any business associate. This means that the Intermediary
needs to be a completely independent party.
None
of the 50 states, or the Federal Government, regulates
Qualified Intermediaries. This means that a convicted
felon could be an Intermediary and hold clients money.
For this reason it is prudent to use caution in selecting
an Intermediary. First of all, you want to make sure
that they are bonded. As I write this there are approximately
2,000 Intermediaries in the United States. Of this amount
only 39 are bonded, meaning that only a very small number
have bothered with the hassles of back ground checks,
etc. Don't automatically believe them when they say
they are bonded - make them give you a copy of the bond.
Rule
#5 - Title Requirement. Any entity, such as corporations, trusts, partnerships,
LLCs, etc. may do an exchange. They all have the same
rule: the tax return that holds title to the Old Property
must be the same tax return that takes title to the
New Property.
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| For example, if Fred & Sue are married (i.e.,
a joint return) and they sell the Old Property, Fred
may not buy a replacement property in
his name only. On the other hand, if Fred & Sue
are brother and sister, then two tax returns own the
Old Property and Fred may buy any New Property he wishes
in his name only (the IRS looks only to his tax return
to see if he met the title requirement).
Likewise,
if a partnership, or LLC, owns the Old Property, then
only one tax return (i.e., the partnerships) owns the
property even though the partnership has many partners.
If the partnership sells the property, then the partners
may not do an exchange - only the partnership may. In
these situations it comes down to "all or none"
when the partnership is considering an exchange.
A
solution that most attorneys devise to the problem of
partners wanting to go different directions is to liquidate
the partnership or LLC and give each of the partners
a tenant-in-common interest in lieu of their partnership
interest. The problem with this solution is the holding
period requirement of one year and a day in Rule #1.
In other words, if you dissolve the partnership today
and close the sale of the property next week, each of
the 'new' owners now has a one week holding period for
their interest: meaning that they held it for resale
and not for investment, which will result in the exchange
being disallowed.
Can
any of the partners sell their partnership interest
and do a 1031 exchange? No - because they are not selling
real estate, they are selling a partnership interest
and the IRS does not allow exchanges of partnership
interests.
Rule
#6 - Reinvestment Targets. To defer all of your capital gains tax, you must buy
a property of equal or higher value than the one you
sold, and you must reinvest all of the cash proceeds
from the sale. It sounds complicated but it's not. Let's
assume the following set of facts:
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| Sale
price of Old Property |
$100,000 |
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| Debts
paid at closing |
40,000 |
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| Cash
to Intermediary |
60,000 |
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Example
#1: Fred & Sue sell their Old Property for $100,000.
The mortgage on the property is paid off at closing
and the balance of $60,000 is transferred to the Intermediary.
If they buy their New property for $90,000, they've
bought down by $10,000. The buy down does not kill their
exchange, but the difference (between the Old sales
price and the New purchase price) of $10,000 is taxable.
The IRS calls this taxable amount "boot."
Example
#2: Same facts, but instead of buying the New Property
for $90,000, they decide to buy a New Property for $150,000
for which they are obtaining a loan for $100,000. This
means that they will only use $50,000 of the $60,000
proceeds that the Intermediary is holding. The $10,000
excess is also boot and is taxable.
In
both of the examples above, the entire $10,000 is taxable.
In a 1031 exchange the gain is taxed first. Where you
have a boot situation, the boot is taxable to the extent
of the lesser of the boot or the entire gain on the
transaction.
So
let me restate this rule for you again: In order to
pay zero tax, you have to do two things: you have to
buy a property equal or higher in value than the one
you sold, and you have to reinvest all of your cash.
Now that we've worked through it, the rule should not
seem so complicated.
Notice
that you do not have to have debt on the New Property
equal to or greater than, the debt that was paid off
on the Old Property. There are people teaching 1031
classes that say this is so, but they're wrong; you
simply have to buy equal or up and reinvest all your
cash.
You
shouldn't have any problems filling up an hour by walking
your students through the six rules above. You can cover
these six things in 15 or 20 minutes if you keep it
really simple, or you can expand the class to an hour
and a half or two hours by adding some more examples
to each requirement. If you want to make sure that your
examples are correct, you may call our national headquarters
(toll free: 866-694-0204) and speak to one of our CPAs
or attorneys free of charge.
In
addition, we have many technical articles covering more
advanced 1031 topics on our web site at expert1031.com.
Feel free to incorporate these into your class. Again,
if you wish to confirm that you are on the right track,
feel free to call our office.
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