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Can You Exchange the Converted?.
A
NonReligious Look at 1031 Exchanges and Apartment-Condo
Conversions...
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by
Curtis Moore, Esq., consultant with The
1031 Exchange Experts |
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Apartment-condominium
conversions have become a very lucrative
way to make money in real estate these days. They are
very popular in resort areas as people see that individual
condominiums are worth more as separate units as compared
to a single apartment building for rent. In addition,
investors and developers are converting office buildings
for rent into office condominiums for similar reasons.
However, a question we are frequently asked by our clients
is whether such a conversion will qualify for a 1031
exchange. The short answer is "maybe," as long as they
are structured properly
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and
Author Gary Gorman
Founding Partner,
The 1031 Exchange Experts |
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Apartment-condominium
conversions have become a very lucrative way to make
money in real estate these days. They are very popular
in resort areas as people see that individual condominiums
are worth more as separate units as compared to a single
apartment building for rent. In addition, investors
and developers are converting office buildings for rent
into office condominiums for similar reasons. However,
a question we are frequently asked by our clients is
whether such a conversion will qualify for a 1031 exchange.
The short answer is "maybe," as long as they are structured
properly.
In
such a transaction, an investor will purchase an apartment
building. Next, the investor gets approvals to sell
individual condo units from the municipality in which
the project is located. Also, the investor will typically
make certain improvements and upgrades to the units,
such as separate utility meters. Finally, the investor/developer
will sell the individual units -- the hope being that
large gains will be earned on those sales. But, can
the investor defer his or her gains by performing a
1031 exchange?
In
the 1031 context, the problems with apartment-condo
conversions are the same as they are for subdivisions
of land by developers. And, in essence, that is what
an apartment-condo conversion is -- a subdivision of
air-space from a single piece of real estate into separate
pieces of real estate, or condominiums.
Congress
and the IRS wish to exclude developers and dealers of
real estate from performing 1031 exchanges. In their
opinion, these people should pay taxes as ordinary income
on their gains, since development is their main livelihood.
However, regular investors can be classified as developers
if they begin to act like developers. For instance,
subdividing your land, installing infrastructure and
selling individual lots makes you look like a developer.
And, like subdividing land makes someone look like a
developer, subdividing air-space into condominiums,
making improvements, and selling them off will make
someone look like a developer. This is especially true
if the condo conversion begins soon after the apartment
building is acquired by the investor.
Now,
simply acquiring the approvals and recording a condo
map (or whatever document the municipality requires
for the subdivision of airspace) should not cause the
IRS to classify you as a developer. For instance, in
the land context, if you owned a farm for several years,
obtained the approvals to rezone and subdivide it, and
then sold the entire project to someone else, your 1031
exchange should still be OK. You did not install any
infrastructure, nor did you sell individual lots to
separate buyers. The same holds true for a condominium
conversion. If you obtained the approvals and subdivided
the apartment, installed few or no improvements, and
sold the whole project off to a single buyer, you still
should be fine.
The
other main issue to consider is the "year-and-a-day
rule." Remember, it is a good rule-of-thumb to hold
both your Old Property and your New Property for at
least a year and a day before selling. Therefore, if
you purchased an apartment, the sure-fire way to pass
an audit would be to prove to the IRS that your intent
when you purchased the project was to either (1) rent
it indefinitely as an apartment, or; (2) perform the
conversion and rent the condos out indefinitely. In
other words, your intent was to hold the property and
rent it out for the foreseeable future. Never, ever,
give anyone any indication that you intended to buy
the property and later sell off individual units --
no matter how far off in the future such sales may occur.
Remember that you cannot do exchanges on property you
hold "primarily for sale." The IRS could use this against
you.
Going
even further, we would recommend that you build a file
that describes your intent to hold the property as a
rental or investment for the foreseeable future (do
not lie, of course -- that could be tax fraud!) Then,
if you later change your mind and decide to sell the
individual condo units, you are in better shape. Again,
we recommend that this not occur for at least a year
and a day.
In
the end, an apartment-condo conversion is really nothing
more than a subdivision. Therefore, if you perform a
1031 exchange, it will naturally have a certain amount
of risk. However, by following some of the guidelines
above, you will give your project the best chance of
surviving an audit.
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