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IRC Section 1031 Like-Kind Exchange

1031 Exchange Tax Deferral Calculator:
Capital Gains and Depreciation Recapture Deferred, Boot Analysis, 45/180-Day Rules, and Purchasing Power Advantage

16-Minute Read Updated June 2026 For Real Estate Investors Planning a Like-Kind Property Exchange

Selling a $450,000 rental property bought 10 years ago for $200,000 triggers $68,156 in federal tax: $14,546 in depreciation recapture (25% on $58,182 accumulated) and $53,610 in capital gains (23.8% on $225,250 long-term gain). A properly executed 1031 exchange defers all $68,156 by rolling the entire $425,250 in net proceeds into a replacement property of equal or greater value within 180 days. The tax deferral provides the investor with 19% more purchasing power for the replacement property — and if continued through subsequent exchanges until death, the step-up in basis can eliminate the deferred taxes entirely without ever paying them.

Capital Gains Deferred Depreciation Recapture 25% 45-Day ID Period 180-Day Closing Period Boot = Taxable Qualified Intermediary Basis Carries Forward Step-Up at Death

IRC Section 1031 is one of the most powerful wealth-building provisions in the US tax code for real estate investors. It allows the indefinite deferral of capital gains taxes and depreciation recapture taxes when investment property is exchanged for like-kind investment property, with the deferred taxes becoming a zero-interest loan from the IRS that continues compounding inside the replacement property until the investor chooses to recognize the gain. The economic benefit is substantial: deferring $68,156 in taxes on a $450,000 sale provides the investor with 19% more capital to deploy into the next property — and that additional 19% compounds with every subsequent exchange, creating a compounding deferral effect that has made the 1031 exchange the single most effective tax minimization tool available to US real estate investors.

The mechanism requires strict compliance with three requirements that, if missed, disqualify the exchange entirely and trigger immediate tax on the full deferred amount: all sale proceeds must pass through a Qualified Intermediary (the investor cannot touch the money), replacement properties must be formally identified in writing within 45 calendar days of the sale closing, and the replacement property must be purchased within 180 calendar days of the sale closing. These requirements are absolute — there are no extensions available except in presidential national disaster declarations. The rigor of the deadline requirements is why real estate attorneys and CPA firms specializing in 1031 exchanges exist as a dedicated professional category: a missed deadline on a $68,156 deferred tax bill is a $68,156 tax bill that arrives without warning.

Tax DisclaimerThis article provides educational information about 1031 exchanges and should not be construed as tax advice. Tax outcomes depend on your specific situation, property characteristics, holding period, income level, and state of residence. Consult a qualified tax professional (CPA or tax attorney) and a Qualified Intermediary before initiating any 1031 exchange.

Three 1031 Exchange Formulas: Tax Deferred, Boot, and Purchasing Power Advantage

The three formulas below quantify what a 1031 exchange saves in taxes, what triggers partial taxation (boot), and how the tax deferral translates into additional purchasing power for the replacement property.

1031 Exchange Formulas

1. TOTAL TAX DEFERRED IN A FULL 1031 EXCHANGE

Tax Deferred = (Depr. Recapture x 25%) + (LTCG x Cap Gains Rate)

2. BOOT (TAXABLE AMOUNT IN PARTIAL EXCHANGE)

Boot = Net Sale Proceeds Amount Reinvested in Replacement

3. PURCHASING POWER ADVANTAGE (EXCHANGE VS OUTRIGHT SALE)

PP Advantage = Net Proceeds / (Net Proceeds – Tax Deferred)
Tax deferred ($450K sale, $200K original, 10yr hold): Depreciation recapture $58,182 x 25% = $14,546. LTCG $225,250 x 23.8% = $53,610. Total deferred = $68,156. State taxes additional if applicable.
Boot example (partial exchange, $50K kept): Net proceeds $425,250. Reinvested $375,250. Boot = $425,250 – $375,250 = $50,000 cash boot. Proportional taxable gain on boot: $50,000 x ($283,432/$450,000) = $31,492 taxable. Tax on boot ≈ $7,493 (at 23.8%).
Purchasing power advantage: $425,250 / ($425,250 – $68,156) = $425,250 / $357,094 = 1.191x (19.1% more purchasing power). At 25% down leverage: $68,156 more in equity x 4 = $272,624 more in property controlled.
10-year compounding on $68,156 deferred: At 8% annual return: $68,156 x (1.08)^10 = $147,149. The deferred tax compounds in the new property rather than being paid to the IRS — functioning as an interest-free loan that grows with the investment.

The purchasing power formula’s result — 1.191x or 19.1% more capital — understates the leverage effect for financed investors. An investor who places the additional $68,156 in a replacement property at 25% down controls $272,624 more in real estate than if they had sold and paid the tax. That $272,624 in additional property generates additional appreciation, rental income, and equity buildup. Over a 10-year hold at 3% appreciation, $272,624 in additional property generates approximately $81,787 in additional appreciation — more than the original deferred tax itself, demonstrating why long-holding-period investors find the 1031 exchange’s compounding deferral to be one of the most powerful wealth-building mechanisms in the US tax code.

Four 1031 Scenarios: Tax Bill Without Exchange, Exchange Benefits, Boot Analysis, and Timeline

Tax Bill Without 1031: $450K Sale
Original purchase price$200,000
Accumulated depreciation (10yr)-$58,182
Adjusted basis$141,818
Sale price$450,000
Selling costs (5.5%)-$24,750
Total realized gain$283,432
Depreciation recapture tax (25%)$14,546
LTCG tax (23.8%)$53,610
Total federal tax owed$68,156
1031 Exchange: Full Tax Deferral
Net sale proceeds to QI$425,250
Required replacement value$450,000+
Required equity reinvested$425,250+
Capital gains deferred$53,610
Depreciation recapture deferred$14,546
Total tax deferred$68,156
Purchasing power retained$425,250 (100%)
vs. outright sale19.1% more capital
Boot Example: Partial Exchange
Net proceeds held by QI$425,250
Reinvested in replacement$375,250
Cash boot received$50,000
Boot as % of proceeds11.8%
Gain allocated to boot$31,492
Tax on boot (at 23.8%)$7,493
Tax still deferred$60,663
Partial exchange valid?Yes (partial deferral)
Critical Timeline: 45 and 180 Days
Exchange startsDay 0: Close sale
QI receives proceedsDay 0 (direct transfer)
45-Day ID deadlineDay 45 (strict)
180-Day close deadlineDay 180 (strict)
Max IDs (3-property rule)3 properties
Extensions available?No (presidential only)
Miss 45-day ID?Exchange disqualified
Miss 180-day close?Exchange disqualified

The partial exchange (boot) card demonstrates that 1031 exchanges do not require 100% reinvestment to provide significant tax deferral. An investor who reinvests $375,250 and retains $50,000 in cash still defers $60,663 in taxes while receiving $50,000 in cash (minus $7,493 in tax on the boot = $42,507 net). This compares favorably to selling outright — where the investor would have $425,250 minus $68,156 in taxes = $357,094 in net after-tax proceeds. The partial exchange produces $375,250 (reinvested) + $42,507 (cash after boot tax) = $417,757 total value — $60,663 more than the outright sale outcome. Partial exchanges are a legitimate and frequently used strategy when the investor needs to access some liquidity while still deferring most of the gain.

Calculate Your 1031 Exchange Tax Deferral and Purchasing Power Advantage

Enter your sale price, original purchase price, years held, accumulated depreciation, selling costs, and capital gains tax rate to calculate the full tax deferred, your net proceeds and adjusted basis, the purchasing power advantage vs outright sale, and the 10-year compounding value of the deferred tax.

Open the 1031 Exchange Calculator

Complete 1031 Exchange Calculation: $450,000 Sale, 10-Year Hold

1031 Exchange Analysis: $200K Original Cost | $450K Sale | 10 Years | 23.8% LTCG Rate
Original purchase price: $200,000 | Structure (80%): $160,0002015 purchase
Annual depreciation: $160,000 / 27.5yr x 10yr accumulated-$58,182 total
Adjusted Basis = $200,000 – $58,182$141,818
Sale price: $450,000 | Selling costs (5.5%): $24,750Net proceeds: $425,250
Total Realized Gain = $450,000 – $141,818 – $24,750$283,432
Depreciation Recapture portion: $58,182 at 25%Tax = $14,546
Long-Term Capital Gain: $283,432 – $58,182 = $225,250 at 23.8%Tax = $53,610
OUTRIGHT SALE: After-tax proceeds = $425,250 – $68,156$357,094 for reinvestment
1031 EXCHANGE: All proceeds retained (QI holds $425,250)$425,250 for reinvestment
Tax Deferred | Purchasing Power Advantage | 10yr Compounding$68,156 | 19.1% | $147,149

The data block’s final line contains the three numbers that summarize why 1031 exchanges dominate real estate investor tax planning: $68,156 deferred (the immediate tax avoided), 19.1% purchasing power advantage (the additional capital available for the next property), and $147,149 in 10-year compounding value (what the deferred tax generates if the replacement property earns 8% annually). Every subsequent 1031 exchange on the replacement property resets this calculation at the higher value — meaning the compounding deferral effect accelerates with each successive exchange as the deferred tax base grows and the replacement property’s equity compounds on a tax-free basis.

1031 Exchange vs Outright Sale: Complete Financial Comparison

MetricOutright Sale (Pay Tax Now)Full 1031 ExchangePartial Exchange ($50K Boot)
Sale price$450,000$450,000$450,000
Selling costs-$24,750-$24,750-$24,750
Net proceeds$425,250$425,250$425,250
Federal tax paid now$68,156$0$7,493 (on boot)
Available for reinvestment$357,094$425,250$417,757
Purchasing power advantageBaseline+$68,156 (+19.1%)+$60,663 (+17.0%)
Max property at 25% down$1,428,376$1,701,000$1,671,028
Additional property controlledBaseline+$272,624+$242,652
Cash received by investor$357,094 (after tax)$0 (all reinvested)$42,507 (boot after tax)
Tax still deferred$0 (all paid)$68,156$60,663
Embedded basis in replacementNew (stepped up)$141,818 (carried forward)$141,818 (carried forward)
Future depreciation recapture riskEliminated (paid now)Deferred (cumulative)Deferred (reduced)
Capital gains rate: 23.8% (20% federal + 3.8% NIIT) for investors with MAGI above $553,850 (married filing jointly 2025). Investors with lower income may face 15% or 0% LTCG rates — recalculate with your actual rate. State income taxes are not included. QI fees ($500-$1,500) not included. Partial exchange boot tax calculated as: ($50,000 boot / $450,000 amount realized) x $283,432 total gain = $31,492 gain allocated to boot x 23.8% = $7,493. Max property at 25% down = Reinvestment Amount / 0.25. “Embedded basis” note: the 1031 exchange carries the $141,818 adjusted basis forward — future depreciation on the replacement property begins from this lower basis, not the $450,000 paid.

The comparison table’s “max property at 25% down” rows illuminate the primary wealth-building argument for 1031 exchanges: the full exchange investor controls $1,701,000 in property versus the outright sale investor’s $1,428,376 — a $272,624 difference in real estate controlled from the same original asset. At 3% appreciation over 5 years, that additional $272,624 generates approximately $43,000 in additional appreciation, and the gap compounds with each subsequent exchange. The investor who executes consecutive 1031 exchanges building a portfolio of properties never pays the accumulated deferred taxes — and at death, heirs receive a stepped-up basis eliminating all deferred gains, making the 1031 exchange strategy a potential permanent elimination of taxes rather than merely a deferral for buy-and-hold-until-death investors.

Boot Scenarios: Tax Due at Different Replacement Property Values

Replacement ValueNet Proceeds UsedBoot (Cash Kept)Taxable Gain on BootTax on Boot (23.8%)Tax Still DeferredNet Cash to Investor
$450,000+ (full exchange)$425,250$0$0$0$68,156$0
$400,000$375,250$50,000$31,492$7,493$60,663$42,507
$350,000$325,250$100,000$62,984$14,990$53,166$85,010
$300,000$275,250$150,000$94,477$22,486$45,670$127,514
$250,000$225,250$200,000$125,969$29,981$38,175$170,019
$141,818 (break-even)$117,068$308,182$194,128$46,202$21,954$261,980
Net Proceeds = $425,250 ($450K sale minus 5.5% selling costs). Boot = Net Proceeds – Amount Reinvested. Taxable Gain on Boot = Boot x (Total Gain / Amount Realized) = Boot x ($283,432 / $450,000) = Boot x 0.6299. Tax = Taxable Gain x 23.8%. Tax Still Deferred = $68,156 – Tax on Boot. Net Cash to Investor = Boot – Tax on Boot. Break-even row: $141,818 replacement value = purchase at adjusted basis level — almost all proceeds become boot, nearly the full tax is triggered. Any replacement property below the adjusted basis ($141,818) would trigger the full tax with no deferral benefit. Partial exchanges are most beneficial when the investor needs some liquidity but can still reinvest the majority of proceeds in a qualifying like-kind property.

The boot table illustrates a key strategic insight: the 1031 exchange does not need to be all-or-nothing. An investor purchasing a $350,000 replacement property still defers $53,166 in taxes ($78% of the maximum deferral) while receiving $85,010 in net cash after the boot tax. This partial exchange enables downsize strategies — an investor who wants to shift from a larger commercial property to a smaller but more manageable rental can use a partial exchange to right-size the portfolio while retaining most of the tax deferral benefit. The exchange is worth pursuing even at significant boot as long as the deferred portion exceeds the QI fees and professional costs.

10-Year Compounding Value of $68,156 Deferred Tax at Different Investment Returns

Annual Return Value of $68,156 deferred tax after 10 years of compounding. Scale: $175K max (10% scenario). The deferred tax acts as an interest-free loan from the IRS that compounds in the investor’s replacement property. 10yr Value
5% annual return
$111,033 (5yr: $87,006) — conservative portfolio return
$111,033
7% annual return
$134,050 — typical long-term real estate total return
$134,050
8% annual return
$147,149 — S&P 500 historical average before tax
$147,149
10% annual return
$176,738 — aggressive real estate with appreciation
$176,738

The growth bars demonstrate the compounding power of the $68,156 deferred tax across reasonable investment return assumptions. At a conservative 5% return, the deferred tax generates $111,033 in portfolio value over 10 years — $42,877 more than the original deferred amount. At 8% (roughly S&P 500 historical average), the deferred tax grows to $147,149 — more than double the original. At 10%, it reaches $176,738. This compounding is why sophisticated real estate investors treat the 1031 exchange not primarily as a tax deferral strategy but as a capital amplification strategy: the IRS is effectively providing an interest-free loan equal to the deferred tax amount, and that loan compounds in the replacement investment rather than being paid out.

1031 Exchange Requirements: What Must Be True for Full Deferral

Seven Requirements for a Valid 1031 Exchange — All Must Be Met

1. Like-kind property: both the relinquished property and the replacement property must be real property held for investment or productive use in a business. Any investment real property can exchange for any other investment real property in the US (residential rental for commercial, raw land for apartment building, etc.) — the “like-kind” requirement in real estate is very broad. 2. Equal or greater value: the replacement property must be of equal or greater fair market value than the relinquished property to defer all capital gains. Purchasing a lower-value property creates boot equal to the difference. 3. Equal or greater equity: the investor must reinvest all net equity from the relinquished property (all after-cost proceeds) into the replacement property. Pocketing any proceeds creates boot. 4. Qualified Intermediary: a QI must hold all exchange proceeds. The investor cannot receive or control funds at any point. 5. 45-day identification: replacement properties must be formally identified in writing to the QI within 45 calendar days of the relinquished property sale. 6. 180-day close: the investor must acquire the replacement property within 180 calendar days of the sale. 7. Intent requirement: both properties must have been held with the intent to use for investment or business — properties purchased and immediately exchanged (dealer property) or used primarily for personal enjoyment do not qualify.

Three Most Common 1031 Exchange Disqualifiers

1. Constructive receipt: if the investor receives even a dollar of the sale proceeds before the exchange closes — including proceeds received by a prohibited party (the investor’s attorney, accountant, or financial advisor who has worked with the investor in the past 2 years) — the exchange is disqualified for the entire amount, not just the received portion. The QI requirement is absolute. 2. Missing the 45-day deadline: the identification must be received by the QI in writing by midnight on day 45. A weekends or holidays do not extend this deadline. Many exchanges fail because the investor spends too long negotiating the replacement property without formally identifying it by the required date. Identify your target properties in writing to the QI well before day 45 — even properties you are still evaluating. 3. Same tax year trap: if the relinquished property sale and the replacement property purchase occur in the same tax year, the IRS may challenge the exchange if it appears the investor simply delayed reporting the gain. Use a QI for all exchanges regardless of timing to establish the required structure from day one.

1031 Exchange Execution Checklist

Engage a Qualified Intermediary Before Listing the Property — Not After Accepting an OfferThe most important timing rule in a 1031 exchange: the QI agreement must be in place and the exchange structure established before the sale closes. If the investor negotiates and signs the purchase agreement for the relinquished property without a QI in place and the exchange agreement referenced in the sales contract, the exchange cannot be retroactively established after closing. Engage the QI when listing the property, include the assignment of the sales contract to the QI in the listing agreement, and ensure the closing documents reference the 1031 exchange. QI fees ($500-$1,500) are minor compared to the deferred tax benefit and should be treated as standard transaction costs. Find a QI through the Federation of Exchange Accommodators (1031.org), a 1031-specialized real estate attorney, or the recommendation of a CPA experienced in real estate transactions.
Identify Replacement Properties by Day 40 — Not Day 45The 45-day identification deadline is a hard cutoff with no exceptions (outside presidential disaster declarations). Many investors allow themselves to run close to the deadline while still negotiating, then miss identification because a deal falls through at day 44. Best practice: identify all three potential replacement properties in writing to the QI by day 40, even if the primary target is still under negotiation. Under the three-property rule, you can identify up to three properties regardless of their combined value — identifying backups provides insurance against the primary falling through without requiring you to commit to a purchase you do not want. The written identification must specify the property clearly enough to be unambiguous (address or legal description) and must be signed by the taxpayer.
Calculate the Adjusted Basis Before Closing — The Basis Determines the Tax BillThe adjusted basis drives both the total gain calculation and the depreciation recapture calculation. Adjusted basis = original cost basis + capital improvements – accumulated depreciation. Do not confuse the original purchase price with the current adjusted basis — 10 years of depreciation deductions have reduced the basis from $200,000 to $141,818 in the example. A common error is using the original purchase price as the basis, understating the taxable gain and creating unexpected tax liability after an exchange is completed. Your CPA or accountant should calculate the adjusted basis from your depreciation schedules (IRS Form 4562 history) before any sale or exchange decision is finalized. The adjusted basis also becomes the starting basis for the replacement property — understanding it precisely is essential for planning future depreciation and eventual sale or exchange.
Understand the Mortgage Boot Trap Before Reducing Debt on the Replacement PropertyMortgage boot occurs when the investor acquires a replacement property with less debt than the relinquished property carried. If the relinquished property had a $200,000 mortgage and the replacement property carries only $150,000 in debt, the $50,000 reduction in debt is mortgage boot — even if the investor reinvests all cash proceeds. Mortgage boot is taxable at the same rates as cash boot. To avoid mortgage boot: carry at least the same amount of debt on the replacement property as was on the relinquished property. Investors who want to reduce leverage (buy a lower-LTV replacement) can offset mortgage boot with cash boot — putting additional cash into the replacement property’s purchase to compensate for the reduced debt. The total debt + equity reinvested in the replacement must equal or exceed the total debt + equity from the relinquished property to eliminate all boot.
Consider the Long-Term Strategy: Serial 1031 Exchanges vs Pay-and-RestartThe tax deferral of a 1031 exchange is most powerful when used serially — exchanging again on the replacement property when it is eventually sold, and again on the next replacement, indefinitely deferring the accumulated gain. Each exchange preserves the full purchasing power from the accumulated appreciation, allowing the portfolio to compound on the full pre-tax value rather than the after-tax residual. The ultimate exit strategy determines whether the 1031 exchange strategy is a deferral or an elimination: investors who hold properties until death transfer them to heirs with a stepped-up basis, permanently eliminating all deferred gains. Investors who sell the replacement property outside a 1031 exchange will owe taxes on the original deferred gain plus any additional appreciation in the replacement property. Strategic exit planning — including charitable remainder trusts, estate planning, and the timing of step-up in basis — should be discussed with a CPA and estate attorney years before any planned exchange or final sale.
Evaluate State Tax Rules — Several States Do Not Recognize 1031 ExchangesWhile federal 1031 exchange deferral is well-established, some states have their own capital gains taxes that do not conform to the federal 1031 exchange provisions. California, for example, historically required payment of state taxes even when the federal exchange was completed, though California now has a clawback provision that requires reporting to California if the replacement property is eventually sold to an out-of-state buyer. Other states with notable 1031 nuances include Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. If the relinquished property and replacement property are in different states, consult a tax professional about both states’ rules. The state tax impact can significantly reduce the total tax deferred from a 1031 exchange for high-state-tax investors.
Verify the QI’s Financial Security and Insurance Before Transferring ProceedsThe QI holds potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars in exchange proceeds during the exchange period. QIs are not federally regulated and have, in some cases, commingled or misappropriated exchange funds. Before selecting a QI: verify they are a member of the Federation of Exchange Accommodators (FEA), confirm they maintain a fidelity bond and errors and omissions insurance of at least $1 million, ask whether exchange funds are held in segregated accounts (not commingled with the QI’s operating accounts), request an audit of the escrow account management practices, and confirm the funds are held in FDIC-insured accounts to the extent possible. The QI failure risk is real and not insignificant — do not select a QI based on price alone. The cost savings of a $300 QI fee versus a $1,200 QI fee is not worth the risk on a $425,250 exchange.

Frequently Asked Questions: 1031 Exchange Tax Deferral Calculator

How does a 1031 exchange work?

A 1031 exchange defers capital gains and depreciation recapture taxes when investment property is sold and proceeds are reinvested in like-kind property. The mechanism: (1) Investor sells property. (2) A Qualified Intermediary receives and holds all proceeds — investor cannot touch the money. (3) Within 45 days: investor identifies replacement properties in writing to the QI. (4) Within 180 days: investor closes on replacement property, QI releases funds to seller. If all proceeds are reinvested in a property of equal or greater value, all capital gains and depreciation recapture taxes are deferred. The basis from the relinquished property carries forward. Taxes remain deferred until the replacement property is sold outside of another 1031 exchange, or eliminated at death through step-up in basis.

How much tax can a 1031 exchange save?

On $450,000 sale, $200,000 original price, 10yr hold: Depreciation recapture: $58,182 x 25% = $14,546. LTCG (23.8% for high earners): $225,250 x 23.8% = $53,610. Total deferred: $68,156 federal (plus state taxes in taxable states). Purchasing power: $425,250 available vs $357,094 after-tax = 19.1% more capital. At 25% down leverage: $272,624 more property controlled. 10yr compounding at 8%: $68,156 grows to $147,149. The long-term benefit compounds with serial exchanges — each successive exchange defers taxes on a growing base, and death with step-up in basis can eliminate all deferred taxes permanently.

What is boot in a 1031 exchange?

Boot is any non-like-kind value received in an exchange that is NOT reinvested in the replacement property. Types: (1) Cash boot: proceeds kept rather than reinvested. (2) Mortgage boot: reduction in debt between properties (if relinquished had $200K mortgage and replacement has $150K, the $50K debt reduction is boot). (3) Personal property boot (rare in post-2017 exchanges). Boot is taxable — the partial exchange is valid but the boot triggers tax on the proportional gain. Example: $50K boot on $450K proceeds = $31,492 taxable gain (at the same ratio as total gain to total proceeds). Tax on boot: $31,492 x 23.8% = $7,493. Remaining $60,663 still deferred. Partial exchanges where some boot is received are legitimate and frequently used — the exchange simply defers a proportional portion of the gain.

What are the 1031 exchange timeline rules?

Two simultaneous deadlines from the sale closing date: (1) 45-day identification: written identification of potential replacement properties to the QI by midnight day 45. No extensions. Three-property rule: up to 3 properties regardless of value. 200% rule: any number of properties if combined value does not exceed 200% of relinquished value. (2) 180-day closing: must acquire replacement property within 180 days of sale. No extensions except presidential national disaster declarations. Both deadlines run from the same start date (sale closing). Missing either deadline disqualifies the entire exchange and triggers immediate tax on the full deferred amount. Best practice: identify by day 40, plan to close by day 160-170 to allow for unforeseen delays.

What properties qualify for a 1031 exchange?

Post-2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act: 1031 exchanges apply ONLY to real property held for investment or productive business use. Qualifying: residential rental (SFR, multifamily, duplex), commercial property (office, retail, industrial), raw land held for investment, NNN-leased commercial, vacation rentals meeting IRS rental thresholds (rented at fair market value 14+ days/year, personal use below 14 days or 10% of rental days). Not qualifying: primary residence (use Section 121 instead), dealer property (held for sale/flipping), stocks, bonds, partnership interests, personal property (eliminated by TCJA). Both relinquished and replacement must be US investment real property. Any US investment real property can be exchanged for any other US investment real property — residential for commercial, land for multifamily, etc. The “like-kind” requirement for real estate is very broad.

Can I do a 1031 exchange on a primary residence?

No — Section 1031 requires investment or business-use property. Primary residences qualify for a separate exclusion under Section 121: $250,000 excluded for single filers, $500,000 for married filing jointly, on a home lived in for 2 of the last 5 years. Hybrid strategies: if you rented a home for 2+ years before selling, it may qualify as investment property for a 1031 exchange — consult a tax professional. If you move into a 1031 exchange replacement property as your primary residence, you must wait 5 years (with 2 years of qualifying occupancy) before potentially using both Section 1031 and Section 121 benefits on subsequent sale. The IRS scrutinizes rental-to-personal-use conversions and primary-to-rental conversions to prevent abuse of both provisions.

What is a Qualified Intermediary in a 1031 exchange?

The QI is a required third party who receives, holds, and transmits exchange proceeds. The investor CANNOT touch the funds at any point — doing so constitutes “constructive receipt” and disqualifies the entire exchange. QI requirements: cannot be the investor’s agent (attorney, CPA, financial advisor, or employee who has worked with the investor in the past 2 years). Must hold funds in a dedicated segregated account. Must transfer funds directly from the relinquished property sale to the replacement property purchase. QI fees: typically $500-$1,500 for standard exchanges, $2,000-$5,000 for reverse or build-to-suit exchanges. Vet the QI: confirm FEA membership (1031.org), E&O insurance minimum $1M, fidelity bond, segregated account management, and FDIC-insured escrow. QI failure (misappropriation) has occurred — the risk is real and not covered by standard property insurance.

What happens to the basis in a 1031 exchange?

The adjusted basis of the relinquished property carries forward to the replacement property. Example: relinquished property adjusted basis $141,818 (original $200K minus $58,182 accumulated depreciation). After 1031 exchange into $450,000 replacement property: replacement property tax basis = $141,818. Future depreciation on replacement = $141,818 x structure % / 27.5yr remaining. The $308,182 difference between basis ($141,818) and price paid ($450,000) is the deferred gain embedded in the replacement property. When the replacement property is sold without a 1031 exchange: taxable gain = (sale price – closing costs) minus $141,818 (the carried-forward basis). The accumulated deferred gains grow with each subsequent 1031 exchange. Death eliminates all accumulated deferred gains through step-up in basis — heirs receive the property at fair market value as the new basis, eliminating all embedded gains.

Is a 1031 exchange worth it?

Yes, in most cases where: (1) The deferred tax exceeds $20,000-$25,000 (below this, QI fees and legal costs may represent a significant percentage of the benefit). (2) A suitable replacement property is available — a 1031 exchange forces reinvestment into like-kind real estate, which may not fit all portfolio strategies. (3) The investor intends to hold real estate long-term or pursue serial exchanges. (4) The investor does not need the liquidity from the sale proceeds immediately. Not worth it when: the gain is small (exchange costs may exceed benefit), the investor needs cash from the sale (they should take a partial exchange if needed), a superior non-real-estate investment opportunity is the intended use of proceeds (1031 locks you into real estate), or the investor is in a low tax bracket where capital gains rates are 0-15% (the benefit is smaller at lower rates). Always run the numbers with a CPA using your actual tax rate and specific transaction details.

Key Takeaways

A 1031 exchange defers federal capital gains tax and depreciation recapture tax by requiring all sale proceeds to pass through a Qualified Intermediary into a replacement property of equal or greater value within the 45-day identification and 180-day closing windows. On the $450,000 sale example, the full tax deferred equals $68,156 ($14,546 depreciation recapture at 25% plus $53,610 LTCG at 23.8%), providing the investor with 19.1% more purchasing power than an outright sale and enabling control of $272,624 more in real estate at 25% down leverage.

The three most critical execution points are: engage a Qualified Intermediary before the sale closes (never after), formally identify replacement properties in writing to the QI by day 40 (not day 45), and never allow the investor to receive any sale proceeds at any point during the exchange period. Boot — whether cash, debt relief, or personal property — is taxable but does not disqualify the exchange; partial exchanges that defer the majority of the gain while allowing some liquidity are legitimate and frequently used. The long-term power of serial 1031 exchanges, compounded by the step-up in basis at death, converts a tax deferral strategy into a potential tax elimination strategy for investors with long holding horizons and estate planning objectives.

Calculate Your 1031 Exchange Tax Deferral, Boot, and Purchasing Power Advantage

Our 1031 Exchange Calculator computes the complete tax picture: adjusted basis from purchase price and accumulated depreciation, total realized gain, depreciation recapture tax, long-term capital gains tax, total federal tax deferred, purchasing power advantage versus outright sale, boot scenarios at different replacement values, and 10-year compounding value of the deferred tax. For related analysis, see our capital gains tax calculator.

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Written, Researched & Reviewed by
David — Finance Expert & Founder, USFinanceCalculators.com ✦ Verified Author LinkedIn
Finance Expert & Founder
David
Founder · USFinanceCalculators.com  |  Lab & CS Manager · Coats
🎯 Specializing in: US Mortgage Math · Business Valuation · Tax & Investment Tools

David is a finance professional, web developer, and the founder of USFinanceCalculators.com — a platform offering 200+ free financial calculators for US consumers and businesses. He holds an MBA in Finance from UET Lahore and an MSc from the University of Karachi, bringing nearly 20 years of experience across financial analysis, data systems, and operations.

In his professional career, David serves as Lab & CS Manager at Coats, a global leader in industrial thread manufacturing. His real-world background in finance and technology drives the accuracy behind every calculator and article on this site. Publishing free financial tools since 2018.

🎓 MBA Finance — UET Lahore 🎓 MSc — University of Karachi 🏭 Manager · Coats 🧮 200+ Calculators Built 📅 Publishing Since 2018