The 1031 exchange is the single most powerful tax deferral tool available to real estate investors — and one of the most misunderstood. Done correctly, it allows you to sell a property with $400,000 in embedded gains, pay zero tax at the time of sale, and roll every dollar into a larger replacement property. The tax doesn't disappear; it defers — potentially indefinitely, through a chain of exchanges that can last an investor's entire lifetime and end with the gain permanently eliminated at death.

Done incorrectly — or not planned for in advance — the same transaction triggers a federal tax bill of $100,000 to $200,000 that cannot be undone after closing. The rules are specific, the timelines are rigid, and the intermediary requirement is absolute. This guide covers everything you need to know before you decide to sell.

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What Is a 1031 Exchange?

A 1031 exchange — named for Section 1031 of the Internal Revenue Code — is a transaction that allows an investor to defer capital gains tax and depreciation recapture tax when selling one investment property and reinvesting the proceeds into a "like-kind" replacement property. The IRS does not consider this a taxable sale; it treats it as a continuation of your investment, not a disposition.

The core mechanism: instead of receiving your sale proceeds directly and paying tax, the money goes to a qualified intermediary (QI) — an independent third party who holds the funds between closing on the relinquished property and closing on the replacement property. You never touch the money. As long as you identify and close on a replacement property within the required timelines, no tax is due.

The deferred tax doesn't disappear permanently. It carries forward in the form of a lower cost basis on the replacement property. When you eventually sell without exchanging, the accumulated deferred gain is recognized and taxed. But for investors who intend to keep exchanging — or who plan to pass real estate to heirs — the deferral can last decades and the gain can be permanently eliminated through the step-up in basis at death.

The Core Benefit
Defer 100% of capital gains and recapture tax
On a property with $400,000 in gains and $247,000 in accumulated depreciation, a properly executed 1031 exchange defers $100,000–$165,000 in federal taxes that would otherwise be due at closing. That capital stays invested, compounding in the replacement property instead of going to the IRS.
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The Rules: Like-Kind, Qualified Intermediary, and Boot

Like-Kind Property Requirement

The replacement property must be "like-kind" to the relinquished property. For real estate, this requirement is broad: any real property held for investment or business use qualifies. You can exchange a residential rental for a commercial building, a raw land parcel for an apartment complex, or a single-family rental for a self-storage facility. What matters is that both properties are real property held for investment or business purposes — not that they're the same type of asset.

What does not qualify: your primary residence, a vacation home you use primarily for personal use, property held primarily for sale (dealer property), and foreign real property (it must exchange for other foreign real property separately).

Qualified Intermediary Requirement

A qualified intermediary — also called an exchange accommodator or exchange facilitator — must be engaged before you close on the sale. The QI holds your sale proceeds in a separate escrow or exchange account and disburses them directly to the title company at closing on the replacement property.

The QI cannot be you, your attorney, your accountant, your real estate agent, or anyone who has served as your agent within the prior two years. It must be a genuinely independent third party. The IRS is strict here: any constructive receipt of the funds — even briefly — disqualifies the exchange. If the wire goes to your account by mistake, the tax is triggered. Engage your QI before you accept an offer.

Boot — What Triggers Partial Tax

"Boot" is any non-like-kind property received in the exchange — most commonly cash, mortgage relief not offset by new debt, or personal property. Boot is taxable in the year of the exchange, up to the amount of gain realized on the relinquished property.

The most common sources of boot that investors accidentally trigger:

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Critical Timelines: 45 Days and 180 Days

Two deadlines govern every 1031 exchange. Miss either one and the exchange fails — there are no extensions, no exceptions for market conditions, and no grace periods. The IRS has occasionally granted relief for federally declared disasters, but in normal circumstances these clocks start the moment you close on the relinquished property and do not stop.

The 45-Day Identification Window

You have 45 calendar days from the closing date of the relinquished property to identify in writing the replacement properties you intend to acquire. The identification must be in writing, signed by you, and delivered to your QI (or the seller, escrow agent, or title company of the replacement property). Verbal identification is not valid.

You can identify multiple properties under one of three IRS-approved rules:

The 45-day clock is unforgiving. Investors who take their time listing the relinquished property and only start looking for replacements at closing frequently run out of time. Begin identifying replacement properties before you close on the sale.

The 180-Day Closing Deadline

You have 180 calendar days from the same closing date — or the due date of your federal tax return for the year of sale, whichever is earlier — to close on the replacement property. This is the outer limit of the entire exchange. The replacement property must be one of the properties you identified within the 45-day window.

The "whichever is earlier" trap catches investors who close late in the tax year. If you close on a relinquished property on December 1, your 180-day window extends to May 30 — but your tax return for that year is due April 15 (or October 15 with extension). Filing a tax return extension is often necessary to get the full 180 days for late-year closings.

Timeline Summary
45 days to identify, 180 days to close
Day 0 is the close date on the relinquished property. Day 45: identification letter to QI with replacement property addresses. Day 180 (or tax return due date if earlier): close on replacement. Both deadlines are absolute. Extensions require a federally declared disaster in the exchange area — not available for personal or business reasons.
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Types of 1031 Exchanges

Delayed (Forward) Exchange — The Standard

The most common structure. You sell the relinquished property first, funds go to the QI, you identify and close on the replacement within the 45/180-day windows. This is what most people mean when they say "1031 exchange." It requires certainty about the replacement before the sale closes — or at minimum, active property search on day one of the exchange window.

Simultaneous Exchange

Both closings happen on the same day. Rarely practical in modern real estate because coordinating two separate closings simultaneously requires both transactions to be ready at the exact same time. Still technically valid and sometimes used in structured transactions between known parties, but not common in arm's-length deals.

Reverse Exchange

You acquire the replacement property first, then sell the relinquished property. The IRS permits this under Revenue Procedure 2000-37, but it requires an Exchange Accommodation Titleholder (EAT) — a specially structured entity that holds title to one of the properties during the exchange period. The same 45/180-day rules apply, running from the date the EAT acquires the parked property. Reverse exchanges are more expensive and complex, but critical when you find the right replacement property before you've sold.

Improvement (Construction) Exchange

Also called a "build-to-suit" exchange. The replacement property is improved using exchange funds during the 180-day window, and the improvements count toward satisfying the "equal or greater value" requirement. Requires an EAT to hold title during construction. Useful when the replacement property is worth less than the relinquished property at the time of identification, but planned improvements will bring it to the required value. All improvements must be completed and title must transfer to you before day 180.

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Worked Example: $800K Rental Sold, $1.2M Replacement Property

Assumptions:

Tax Component Without 1031 With 1031 Exchange
Sale price (net) $1,100,000 $1,100,000
Adjusted basis $552,727 ($800K − $247,273) $552,727
Total gain $547,273 $0 recognized
Recapture tax (Sec. 1250) $71,215 (25% + 3.8% NIIT on $247,273) $0
Capital gains tax $71,400 (20% + 3.8% NIIT on $300,000) $0
Total federal tax due $142,615 $0
Capital available for reinvestment $957,385 $1,100,000

The difference is $142,615 staying invested instead of going to the IRS. Deployed into a $1.2M replacement property at a 6% cap rate, that additional capital generates $8,557 per year in additional income — compounding over the holding period in the replacement asset instead of sitting in the Treasury.

The Basis Carryover
$552,727 carried to replacement property
The replacement property's tax basis is not the $1.2M purchase price — it's the $552,727 adjusted basis carried over from the relinquished property, plus the $100,000 cash added ($652,727 total). Future depreciation on the replacement starts from this lower basis. The $547,273 in deferred gain is embedded in the replacement property and will be recognized when you eventually sell without exchanging — or permanently eliminated through a step-up in basis at death. See our depreciation recapture guide for how the carryover mechanics interact with future recapture exposure.
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Common Mistakes

1. Missing the 45-day identification deadline

The single most common exchange failure. Investors close on the sale, receive the funds (through the QI), and assume they have six months to find a replacement. They have 45 days to identify — in writing. Investors who wait until they've sold to start looking at replacement properties frequently run out of time in a competitive market. The fix: identify candidate properties before you accept an offer on the relinquished property.

2. Touching the proceeds

Constructive receipt is immediate disqualification. This includes: wiring funds to your personal account even briefly, accepting a check payable to you, or receiving any benefit from the funds before closing on the replacement. Your attorney or escrow company wiring funds to the wrong account is not a defense. The QI must be engaged before closing, and all proceeds must flow directly to the QI without passing through you. If you have any doubt about wire instructions, confirm them directly with your QI before closing.

3. Not using a qualified intermediary

Attempting a 1031 exchange by holding funds yourself, through your own LLC, or through your attorney or accountant (disqualified persons) voids the exchange. The QI requirement is not optional or substitutable. Engage an independent, specialized QI before you accept an offer — not after closing.

4. Trading down and creating unintended boot

To fully defer all gain, you must reinvest all net proceeds into property of equal or greater value and carry equal or greater debt. Investors who find a replacement property that costs less than their sale price, or who take out a smaller mortgage on the replacement, create boot — a taxable event that partially defeats the exchange. Model the exchange economics before you identify a replacement property, not after.

5. Not accounting for the tax return deadline

For late-year sales, your tax return due date (April 15 or October 15 with extension) may cut your 180-day window short. Investors who close in November or December and don't file an extension can find their exchange window shortened by weeks. File an extension proactively if your sale closes after October 17 of any year.

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When a 1031 Exchange Is NOT the Right Move

A 1031 exchange is not always optimal. Here are the situations where selling outright — and paying the tax — is the better financial decision.

You have losses to harvest elsewhere in the portfolio

If you have other investment properties or assets with unrealized losses, selling the appreciated property and recognizing the gain may be offset by harvesting those losses in the same tax year. Capital losses offset capital gains dollar-for-dollar. A $200,000 gain recognized in the same year as a $200,000 loss nets to zero. If you have offsetting losses available, a 1031 exchange may be unnecessary and the tax cost may be near zero without the complexity.

Step-up in basis planning makes a sale favorable

If you're in late-stage estate planning, selling and locking in your gains before death can sometimes make sense. In certain estate structures (irrevocable trusts, for example), assets may not receive a step-up in basis at death. A tax advisor can model whether selling now and paying gains at current rates is better than a deferred exchange with the eventual step-up, depending on your estate structure, heirs, and expected holding period.

You can't find a suitable replacement property

A forced exchange into a low-quality replacement property is worse than paying the tax and waiting for the right investment. Do not let the tax tail wag the investment dog. Overpaying for a replacement property by $150,000 to avoid a $100,000 tax bill is a net-negative outcome. The exchange is only beneficial if the replacement is a sound investment on its own merits.

The property has significant losses — or minimal appreciation

If the property has declined in value or has minimal appreciation, there may be little gain to defer. The cost and complexity of a 1031 exchange — QI fees, legal review, timeline management, potentially paying above-market for a replacement in a compressed window — may not be worth the tax savings on a small gain. Run the numbers before committing to the exchange structure.

You need the liquidity

A 1031 exchange locks your capital into real estate. If your financial plan calls for diversification into other asset classes, paying down debt, or deploying capital outside of real property, recognizing the gain and paying the tax may be the right call. The exchange is powerful for investors who intend to stay in real estate — it's not right for investors who need the cash or want to rebalance out of the sector.