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Posted Monday, July 6, 2026
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1031 Exchange Tax Deferral Strategy
You just sold a rental property for $650,000 that you bought fifteen years ago for $275,000. Congratulations – you made a great investment. Now comes the part nobody thinks about until it’s too late: the tax bill. Between federal capital gains at 15-20%, depreciation recapture at 25%, Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) at 3.8%, and state income tax, you could easily owe $120,000 or more. That is not a typo.
Or you could owe nothing. Right now, at least.
Section 1031 of the Internal Revenue Code lets you defer all of that tax by reinvesting your sale proceeds into a like-kind replacement property. The gain doesn’t disappear – it rolls forward into the new property. But if you never sell that replacement property (or you keep exchanging into new ones), that tax bill might never come due. And if you play it right, it literally dies with you. More on that in a minute.
The catch? The rules are specific, the deadlines are unforgiving, and one wrong move can blow the entire exchange. This is not a DIY project. At WCG, we handle 1031 exchange tax planning, coordination, and reporting for real estate investors who want to defer the maximum amount of tax – legally, cleanly, and without surprises.
A 1031 exchange – sometimes called a like-kind exchange or a Starker exchange – allows you to sell investment or business-use real property and defer the capital gains tax by reinvesting the proceeds into another qualifying property. The concept has been in the tax code since 1921, and for good reason. It keeps capital moving through the real estate market instead of siphoning it off to the IRS every time an investor repositions.
Here is the key phrase: defer, not eliminate. You are kicking the tax can down the road. Your basis in the replacement property carries over from the old property (adjusted for any boot received, which we will get to). So the gain is still embedded in the new property. Sell that property outright someday and you will owe the tax then.
Having said that, “someday” can be a very long time. And in some cases, someday never comes. But we are getting ahead of ourselves.
A few critical rules. Here we go-
Sidebar: The 45-day and 180-day rules run concurrently, not consecutively. So you really have 180 days total, with the identification locked in by day 45. Some people read this as 45 plus 180. It is not. It is 180 total, with a hard checkpoint at day 45.
Let’s say you bought a rental property for $400,000 fifteen years ago. You have taken $145,000 in depreciation over that time (as you should – depreciation is not optional on rental property). Your adjusted basis is now $255,000. You sell for $700,000.
Your total gain is $445,000. But it breaks into two pieces-
Add it up and you are looking at somewhere between $118,000 and $133,000 in taxes. On a $700,000 sale. Yuck.
A properly executed 1031 exchange defers all of it. Every penny. You take that full $700,000 (minus selling costs) and roll it into the replacement property. Your new property inherits the old basis, and the gain carries forward. You keep your capital working instead of writing a six-figure check to the government.
Said another way – the 1031 exchange lets you reinvest pre-tax dollars. Your $700,000 stays $700,000 instead of becoming $570,000 after taxes. That extra $130,000 of buying power is now generating rental income, appreciating, and compounding. Over another 10-15 years, the difference is enormous.
Not every exchange is a simple swap. Real estate transactions are messy, and the IRS has accommodated several variations. Here we go-
Here is what a real financial reporting package looks like for a small business. Here we go -
We have seen exchanges fail for preventable reasons more times than we would like. Here are the ones that come up repeatedly-
This is the ultimate real estate tax strategy, and we love talking about it.
The concept is simple: keep doing 1031 exchanges for your entire life. Sell a property, exchange into a bigger one. Sell that one, exchange into two properties. Keep deferring, keep upgrading, keep building. Never trigger the tax.
Then you die. (Sorry, but this is a tax article.)
When you die, your heirs receive the property with a stepped-up basis under IRC Section 1014. The fair market value at the date of your death becomes their new basis. All that deferred gain? All that depreciation recapture? Gone. Erased. Your heirs can sell the property the next day and owe little to no tax.
Let’s say you started with a $200,000 property twenty-five years ago. Through a series of 1031 exchanges, you now own a $2,000,000 commercial building with a carryover basis of $85,000. If you sold it, you would owe tax on $1,915,000 of gain. That is potentially $500,000+ in combined taxes.
But you hold it. You die owning it. Your heirs get it at a $2,000,000 basis. The $1,915,000 of deferred gain and all the accumulated depreciation recapture vanish. They sell it for $2,000,000 and owe nothing.
Swap til you drop. It is not a loophole – it is the intersection of two longstanding provisions of the tax code (Section 1031 and Section 1014). Elegant.
Sidebar: This strategy works best when coordinated with estate planning. If you are building a real estate portfolio with 1031 exchanges, you need your estate plan to reflect that strategy. We work with estate attorneys to make sure the pieces fit together.
A 1031 exchange is not just a real estate transaction – it is a tax event that requires planning before the sale, coordination during the exchange, and proper reporting afterward.
Here is what we do-
A 1031 exchange does not exist in a vacuum. It is one piece of a larger real estate tax strategy that includes rental property tax preparation, cost segregation studies, depreciation planning, and entity structuring.
Let’s say you own four rental properties in an LLC. You sell one and do a 1031 exchange into a larger commercial property. On the replacement property, we run a cost segregation study and accelerate $200,000 of depreciation into the first year. That deduction offsets your rental income, potentially your active income if you qualify as a real estate professional, and builds a loss carryforward. Meanwhile, the other three properties are on regular depreciation schedules, generating steady deductions each year.
That is not a random collection of tax tactics. That is a coordinated strategy – and it is exactly the kind of work we do at WCG.
If you own rental property and are thinking about selling, refinancing, or repositioning your portfolio, talk to us before you list anything. The 1031 exchange planning needs to happen before the sale, not after. We cannot fix a blown exchange after the fact.
For real estate, like-kind is extremely broad. Any real property held for investment or business use is like-kind to any other real property held for investment or business use. A duplex is like-kind to a warehouse. A parking lot is like-kind to an apartment complex. Raw land is like-kind to a commercial office building. The key requirement is the use – it must be investment or business property, not personal.
No. Section 1031 applies only to property held for productive use in a trade or business or for investment. Your primary residence does not qualify. However, if you convert a rental property to your primary residence (or vice versa), there are rules under Section 121 that may apply. The interaction between Section 121 and Section 1031 is complicated, and we can walk you through it.
The exchange fails. Your sale becomes a taxable event, and you owe tax on the full gain. There is no relief provision, no extension request, no late filing option. The 45-day rule is absolute. This is why pre-sale planning is so critical – you need to be looking at replacement properties before you even close on the sale.
Boot is anything you receive in the exchange that is not like-kind property. Cash you pull out of the exchange is boot. If the replacement property is cheaper than the property you sold, the difference is boot. If your mortgage on the replacement property is lower than the mortgage on the property you sold, the debt relief is boot (called mortgage boot). Boot is taxable, and it is the most common source of unexpected tax liability in 1031 exchanges.
Yes. You can sell one property and identify up to three replacement properties under the three-property rule regardless of value. Or you can identify more than three as long as their combined value does not exceed 200% of the relinquished property’s value (the 200% rule). There is also a 95% rule for identifying even more properties, but it requires you to acquire at least 95% of the identified value. Most investors stick with the three-property rule.
Yes. The QI holds the sale proceeds and disburses them to purchase the replacement property. Without a QI, you have constructive receipt of the funds, and the exchange fails. Your attorney, CPA, real estate agent, or anyone who has served as your agent in the prior two years cannot act as QI. Use an independent, established QI.
Yes, through an improvement or construction exchange. The QI (or an exchange accommodation titleholder) holds title to the replacement property while improvements are made using exchange funds. The improvements must be completed within the 180-day exchange period. These exchanges are more complex and more expensive to execute, but they allow you to essentially renovate using pre-tax dollars. We coordinate the structure and reporting.
Swap til you drop means continuously doing 1031 exchanges throughout your lifetime – deferring gain on each sale by rolling into replacement properties. When you die, your heirs receive the property with a stepped-up basis under Section 1014. All the deferred gain and depreciation recapture disappears. Your heirs can sell the property with little or no tax liability. It is the most powerful long-term tax strategy in real estate.
Beautifully. After you complete a 1031 exchange and acquire the replacement property, we can perform a cost segregation study on the new asset. Cost segregation reclassifies components of the building into shorter depreciation lives – 5, 7, and 15 years instead of 27.5 or 39. This accelerates your depreciation deductions on the replacement property, generating significant tax benefits in the early years of ownership. You deferred the gain through the exchange and now you are accelerating deductions on the new property. Stack those strategies.
Our fees depend on the complexity of the exchange – a straightforward delayed exchange with one replacement property is simpler than a reverse exchange or improvement exchange with multiple properties. We include 1031 exchange reporting as part of our rental property tax preparation and real estate tax services. Contact us for a quote based on your specific situation.
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The tax advisors, business consultants and rental property experts at WCG CPAs & Advisors are not salespeople; we are not putting lipstick on a pig expecting you to love it. Our job remains being professionally detached, giving you information and letting you decide within our ethical guidelines and your risk profiles.
We see far too many crazy schemes and half-baked ideas from attorneys and wealth managers. In some cases, they are good ideas. In most cases, all the entities, layering and mixed ownership is only the illusion of precision. As Chris Rock says, just because you can drive your car with your feet doesn’t make it a good idea. In other words, let’s not automatically convert “you can” into “you must.”
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Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Designed for rental property owners where WCG CPAs & Advisors supports you as your real estate CPA.
Everything you need from tax return preparation for your small business to your rental to your corporation is here.
WCG’s primary objective is to help you to feel comfortable about engaging with us