1031 Exchanges
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies

Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal


Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback
Updated almost 6 years ago on . Most recent reply

Going under on a 1031 after all is said and done
We recently finished a 1031.
I am just curious if anyone knows what happens if in a 1031 after you ID properties/go into escrow what happens if you are below the number you are suppose to hit. Obviously we went over but let’s say you do a 1031 for 1.0m and after expenses and everything, the cost come out to only 980,000 let’s say. So you are under 20 grand
What happens to that 20 grand left over?
I know the rules of a 1031 are pretty strict but I imagine that 20 grand left over just becomes taxable income/cash.
Anyone know?
Most Popular Reply

@Jonathan Watt
Exactly right. It’s as if you sold a $20k gain property without doing a 1031.
@Dave Foster can probably tell you what percent of that $20k is taxed as capital gains (usually 15%) and what percent is taxed as depreciation recapture. (25%)