 |
Simultaneous
Closings
Can
Save You 1031 Exchange Fees
Rule #4 of my
six basic rules for 1031 exchanges is you
can not touch the money between the sale of your
Old Property and the purchase of your New Property.
IRS law requires that you use an independent third
party (called a Qualified Intermediary) to handle
your exchange. At least that’s the general
rule. When you’re dealing with the IRS, there
are usually exceptions to the rules, and such is
the case with this rule. Being aware of this exception
can save you the cost of an intermediary, which runs
at least $500 in most parts of the country.
 |
by
Author Gary Gorman
Founding Partner,
1031 Exchange Experts, LLC |
|
Section 1031 requires the use of a
Qualified Intermediary only if you can not sell your
Old Property and buy your New in a simultaneous closing.
A simultaneous closing is easy if you are trading properties
with your buyer. For example, Fred and Sue are trading
their purple duplex to Sam Seller in exchange for his
red office building. Both properties are worth $100,000.
At the closing Fred and Sue give Sam the deed for the
duplex, and he gives them the deed to his office building
a Qualified Intermediary is not required for this transaction.
Rarely will you be able to find a buyer
for your property who also happens to own your ideal
replacement property. Typically, you have a buyer for
your property and then find your replacement property.
But you can still take advantage of this rule if you
make both closings simultaneous. So how do you make
two completely separate closing simultaneous? Well,
the IRS defines a simultaneous closing as closings
using the same title or escrow office on the same day.
In light of this, let’s say Sam
Seller decides NOT to buy Fred and Sue’s purple
duplex. Instead, Fred and Sue decide to sell their
purple duplex to Bob Buyer, and then purchase Sam Sellers
red office building. This is two separate closings,
so if Fred and Sue want to save themselves the intermediary
fee, they’ll have to hold both closings at the
same title/escrow office on the same day. Typically
they would sell the duplex to Bob in the morning, and
then purchase the office building from Sam in the afternoon.
That’s the IRS definition of a simultaneous closing.
In many parts of the country, real
estate closings are handled by title or escrow companies
with multiple offices. The same office means exactly
that: the same office – it does not mean different
offices of the same title company. Several years ago,
we were asked to represent a taxpayer that had sold
a property in one state, and closed the purchase of
the new property on the same day, with the same title
company, but in a different state. The IRS was disallowing
his exchange, and he asked us for help. We advised
him to settle with the IRS because he had no chance
of winning.
And same day means the very same day;
you don’t get excused even if you have no control
over the events that caused your purchase to get pushed
to the next day. This means that if Sam Seller, in
Fred and Sue’s example above, is incapacitated
by a car accident on the way to the closing of Fred
and Sue’s New Property, their exchange will be
toast. For this reason, taxpayers will often retain
an intermediary, at reduced fees, to prepare protective
exchange documents in case something goes wrong. If
you do this, the protective documents must be prepared
and signed before the closing of the sale of the Old
Property.
A few years ago one of our clients
retained us to prepare protective documents on a simultaneous
closing, and it’s a good thing that he did! The
closing of his Old Property in the morning went off
without a hitch, but at the closing of the purchase
of the New Property in the afternoon, the seller had
an emotional breakdown and was unable to close. It
turns out that the property was a lovely home in the
mountains with spectacular views. The seller’s
mother had come to live with them several years earlier,
and the mother had come to love the property, with
the views and the deer and other wildlife. When Mom
died, in accordance with her will, her ashes were scattered
on the property. At the closing the seller confronted
the fact that this wasn’t just selling the house,
it was also selling Mom! While the closing did not
happen until the next day, it turned out all right
because our protective documents were in place.
While simultaneous closings can save
a few hundred dollars in exchange fees, an investor
stands to lose a whole lot more than that if anything
should go wrong. A prudent investor will always consult
with a Qualified Intermediary regardless, just in case.
|