What is a 1031 Exchange?
A 1031 exchange, also known as a like-kind exchange or tax deferred exchange, is where real property that is “held for productive use in a trade or business or investment” is sold and the proceeds from the sale are reinvested into a like-kind property intended for business or investment use, allowing the taxpayer, or seller, to defer the capital gains tax and depreciation recapture on the transaction.
The property sold as part of a 1031 exchange is the
Relinquished Property. The property purchased is the Replacement Property. The
real property in a 1031 exchange must be like-kind; most real estate is
like-kind to all other real estate. For example, an office building could be
exchanged for a rental duplex, a retail shopping center could be exchanged for
farmland, etc.
During a 1031 exchange, neither the taxpayer, nor an agent
of the taxpayer, can receive or control the funds from the sale of the
property. If a taxpayer has direct or indirect access to the funds, a 1031
exchange is no longer valid. A qualified intermediary is used to hold the
proceeds of the Relinquished Property sale until it is time to transfer those
proceeds for the close of the Replacement property.
To be eligible for a 1031 exchange the person or entity must
be a US tax paying identity. This includes individuals, partnerships,
S-corporations, C-corporations, LLCs, and trusts. However, it is a requirement
that the same taxpayer sells the relinquished property and purchases the
replacement property for a valid exchange.
1031 exchanges were first authorized in 1921 because
Congress saw the importance of people reinvesting in business assets and they
wanted to encourage more of it. There have been changes and additions to the
regulations that govern 1031 exchanges, and the most recent changes impacting
real estate in a 1031 exchange were in 2017.
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