By Ronald L. Raitz, CCIM
Internal Revenue Code Section 1031 tax-deferred
exchanges may look similar to simple property
acquisitions in which the buyer uses funds from a
previous building sale. However, these transactions
entail specific closing details that differ from
traditional real estate sales. Relinquished property
sellers must handle earnest money and certain closing
expenses properly to maximize exchange transactions' tax
benefits.
Refunding Earnest Money Deposit
During most real estate sales, prospective buyers offer
sellers earnest money as a down payment toward the final
transaction. During 1031 exchanges many sellers want to
know if they can hold the earnest money. The answer is
absolutely. The Internal Revenue Service does not
prohibit taxpayers from holding earnest money when
executing exchange transactions, yet certain rules
apply.
Once the closing takes place, the earnest money deposit
becomes proceeds. If the relinquished property seller
possesses the earnest money after closing, the IRS
considers the deposit taxable proceeds. To avoid this,
the seller should refund the earnest money to the
closing. The seller incurs no gain as long as he refunds
the deposit amount.
Usually problems don't arise if a real estate company or
title/escrow company holds the earnest money. In that
situation, the company forwards the earnest money to the
closing or retains it to real estate commission, which
is an allowable exchange expense.
Closing Statement Issues
In real estate transactions, the parties use closing
statements, or escrow agreements, to memorialize
purchase-and-sales agreement terms.
The closing statement's focus is the price, but the
contract can stipulate other items such as prorated
rents and property taxes, escrow account buyouts,
security deposit transfers, or prepaid service contract
reimbursements that the settlement statement commonly
reflects.
Typically the settlement statement also shows closing
costs such as attorneys' fees, real estate commissions,
or transfer taxes associated with the sale. Items shown
as a cost to the seller become a debit on the settlement
statement and reduce the amount of proceeds available
after the sale.
In exchanges, settlement statement costs to the seller
reduce exchange proceeds. In addition, the IRS treats
non-allowable exchange expenses charged to the seller as
taxable items. Some of the more common non-allowable
exchange items include prorated rents, security deposit
transfers, and loan fees. For example, a relinquished
property is a rental building with an existing tenant,
and the contract stipulates that the seller transfer the
security deposit to the new owner.
In this situation, the IRS does not consider the
security deposit a closing cost; it simply is an
additional business item that happens to be associated
with the sales contract. However, if the settlement
statement charges the security deposit amount against
the seller, the debit reduces the exchange proceeds
amount. The seller probably delineates this reduction on
his 8824 exchange reporting form, which requires him to
pay taxes on the amount. As this example demonstrates,
sellers should strive to minimize non-allowable exchange
expenses during 1031 exchange closings.
Resolving Closing Statement Questions
To fix non-allowable exchange items simply, the seller
should show them as paid outside closing, or POC, on the
settlement statement and give the buyer a separate
check. By following this procedure, these non-allowable
items don't reduce proceeds and don't trigger taxable
gain.
For example, Jerry is selling a $750,000
single-tenant-leased building. The closing is taking
place mid-month, and the contract calls for security
deposit transfer and rent proration. Jerry holds a
$15,000 security deposit and $10,000 in prorated rent
for the balance of the month, as well as a $7,500
earnest money deposit.
Jerry seeks advice from a 1031 professional service
provider on how to minimize his tax consequences during
the transaction. The tax adviser instructs the closing
attorney to list the security deposit transfer and
prorated rents as POC. At the closing, Jerry writes a
check made payable to the buyer for $25,000 (the
security deposit and prorated rent) and a check made
payable to the closing attorney for $7,500 (the earnest
money refund). By handling the designated non-allowable
closing items and the earnest money in this fashion,
Jerry ensures that his exchange transaction triggers no
tax.
The appropriate handlings of earnest money and closing
statements are only two of the potential complications
during 1031 tax-deferred exchanges. Individuals not
familiar with 1031 exchange complexities should seek
qualified advice from a tax professional to achieve the
desired economic benefits. Otherwise, supposed tax-free
exchange transactions may leave sellers with surprise
tax bills.
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