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The Role of Debt in a 1031 Exchange
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by
Author Gary Gorman
Founding Partner,
The 1031 Exchange Experts |
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The role that debt plays in a exchange is probably one
of the most misunderstood areas of 1031 law. Many people
(including qualified intermediaries, CPAs, and attorneys)
believe that you are required to have debt on your New
Property in an amount equal to or greater than the debt
that was paid off on your Old Property. This is NOT,
In fact, a requirement for a 1031 exchange.
The actual requirement is two fold: you must buy equal
or up, and you must reinvest all of the cash. Assume
for example that you sell a purple duplex for $100,000
and you buy a replacement property for $90,000. You
did not buy equal or up; in fact you bought down. As
a result, the $10,000 buy-down is taxable—yes,
the entire $10,000 is taxable, and you do not apportion
any of the original cost of the duplex to this gain.
Let’s change the example and assume that you are
buying the replacement property for $150,000. Since
you sold the duplex for $100,000, you are now buying
UP, so the equal-or-up rule is not a problem for you.
However, let’s say that when you sold the duplex,
your intermediary received the net proceeds of $60,000
(after paying off the mortgage and closing costs). To
pay for the purchase of your New Property, you get a
mortgage for $100,000 which means that you only need
$50,000 of the $60,000 the intermediary is holding.
In other words you have $10,000 cash left over. You
will pay tax on the $10,000 even though you are buying
up. And, as before, the entire $10,000 is taxable.
As
I’ve said before, if you buy equal or up and reinvest
all of the cash, you will pay no tax on your exchange
and debt plays no part in the transaction. Going back
to our original example: you sold the purple duplex
for $100,000 and after paying off the mortgage and closing
costs, the intermediary receives $60,000. Now you are
buying a New Property for $100,000 and you use the $60,000
the intermediary is holding. You owe the balance of
$40,000, but it does not matter how you come up with
it—you could get a new loan of course, or you
could take $40,000 out of your savings account, or some
combination of the two (say a $20,000 new loan and $20,000
from your savings account). You simply have to buy equal
or up, and reinvest all the cash. Equalizing the debt
is not a requirement.
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