Have you ever called your mutual funds family and
exchanged the share in your growth fund for shares in a value fund? If
so, you know that you pay capital gains taxes. A swap like this actually
requires selling those growth fund shares.
Or
try bartering your professional service. Offer, say, your medical
services for a friend?s legal services to avoid income tax. If you?re
audited, the IRS will nail you for not reporting the equivalent of wage
income.
But if real estate?s your game,
then swapping is a way of life. One of the sweetest tax breaks ever
devised is the section 1031 exchange, which allows you to swap
investment property on a tax-deferred basis.
Although
sometimes known as like-kind exchanges, these transactions don?t have
to involve identical types of investment property.
You
can swap an apartment building for a shopping center, or a piece of raw
land for an office building. You can swap a second home that you rent
out for a parking lot.
It?s a tremendous deal, you can't do that with stocks or bonds or personal property.
Originally,
Section 1031 transactions were designed for people who wanted to
exchange properties of equal value. Suppose you own land in Oregon and
you trade it for a shopping center in Rhode Island. If the values are
equal, nobody pays taxes even though both properties may have
appreciated since they were originally purchased.
One
variation involves properties of unequal value. Let?s say you have a
small piece of property, and you want to trade up to a bigger one by
exchanging it with another party. You can make the transaction without
having to pay capital gains tax on the difference between the smaller
property?s current market value and your lower original cost.
That?s
good for you, but your partner doesn?t make out so well. Presumably,
you have to pay cash or assume a mortgage on the bigger property to make
up the difference in value. Known as "boot"in the tax trade, your
partner must pay tax on that part transaction.
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Work Through An Agent
To
avoid that, you could work through an intermediary, who is often known
as an escrow agent. Instead of a two-way deal involving a one-for-one
swap, your transaction becomes a three-way deal.
Your
replacement property may come from a third party through the escrow
agent. Juggling numerous properties in various combinations, the escrow
agent may arrange evenly valued swaps.
Under
the right circumstances, you don?t even need to do an equal exchange.
You can sell a property at a profit, buy a more expensive one, and defer
the tax indefinitely.
You sell a
property and have the cash put into an escrow account. Then the escrow
agent buys another property that you want. He or she gets the title to
the deed and transfers the property to you.
But
you need to move fast. You must identify your replacement property
within 45 days of selling your estate. Then you must close on that
within 180 days. There is no grace period.
If
your closing gets delayed by a storm or by other unforeseen
circumstances, and you cannot close in time, you?re back to a taxable
sale.
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Advance Planning Required
Some accountants and lawyers specialize in Section 1031 exchanges to make sure that you qualify.
Because
it?s such a significant tax benefit, there are all kinds of
restrictions and pitfalls that you?ve got to be careful of. You?ve got
to dot all of you i?s and cross all of your t?s.
A
Section 1031 transaction takes advance planning. Find an escrow agent
that specializes in the transaction. Contact your accountant to set up
the IRS form ahead of time. Some people just sell their property, take
cash and put it in their bank account. They figure that all they have to
do is find a new property within 45 days and close within 180 days. But
that?s not the case.
As soon as
(sellers) have cash in their hands, or the paperwork isn?t done right,
they?ve lost their opportunity to use this provision of the code.
Section
1031 doesn?t apply to personal residences. But the IRS lets you sell
your principle residence tax-free as long as the gain is under $250,000
for individuals and under $500,000 if you?re married.