Introduction To 1031 Exchanges
A 1031 Exchange (Tax-Deferred Exchange) Is One
Of The Most Powerful Tax Deferral Strategies Remaining Available For Taxpayers.
Anyone involved with advising or counseling real estate investors should know
about tax-deferred exchanges, including Realtors, lawyers, accountants,
financial planners, tax advisors, escrow and closing agents, and lenders.
Taxpayers should never have to pay income taxes on the sale of property if they
intend to reinvest the proceeds in similar or like-kind property.
The Advantage of a 1031 Exchange
is the ability of a taxpayer to sell income, investment or business property and
replace with like-kind replacement property without having
to pay federal income taxes on the transaction. A sale of property and
subsequent purchase of a replacement property doesn't work, there must be an
Exchange. Section 1031 of the Internal Revenue Code is the
basis for tax-deferred exchanges. The IRS issued "safe-harbor" Regulations in
1991 which established approved procedures for exchanges under Code Section
1031. Prior to the issuance of these Regulations, exchanges were subject to
challenge under examination on a variety of issues. Since issuance of the 1991
Regulations, tax-deferred exchanges are easier, less expensive and safer than
ever before.
The Disadvantages of a
Section 1031 Exchange include a reduced basis
for depreciation in the replacement property. The tax basis of replacement
property is essentially the purchase price of the replacement property minus the
gain which was deferred on the sale of the exchange property as a result of the
exchange.
Exchange Techniques
There is more than one way to structure a tax-deferred exchange" under
Section 1031 of the Internal Revenue Code. However, the 1991 Regulations
established safe harbor procedures which include the use of an Intermediary,
direct deeding, the use of qualified escrow accounts for temporary holding of
"exchange funds" and other procedures which now have the official blessing of
the IRS. Therefore, it is desirable to structure exchanges so that they can be
in harmony with the 1991 Regulations. As a result, exchanges commonly employ the
services of an Intermediary with direct deeding.
Exchanges can also occur without the services of an Intermediary when parties to
an exchange are willing to exchange deeds or if they are willing to enter into
an Exchange Agreement with each other. However, two-party exchanges are rare
since in the typical Section 1031 transaction, the seller of the replacement
property is not the buyer of the taxpayer's exchange property.