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Updated almost 2 years ago on .
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1031 Exchange into a Partnership/LLC/etc..
Hi All,
I have a question about the 1031 process. My brother-in-law is under contract to sell his single-family investment property, and will be netting about 225k. He is interested in partnering with me and using the proceeds to 1031 into a down payment on a large multi-family property, the situation would be one where he is funding it with his 1031 proceeds and I am doing all of the leg work and we will split equity and profits 50/50.
From a legal perspective, how would this work? Would he need to buy the property initially under his name, and then at a later date and after a seasoning period transfer it to an LLC that we are both members of? Is this even allowed? I am assuming we can't create the LLC and do the purchase under that because it has to be the same entity that is both relinquishing and purchasing.
Would it be easier to just have it all in his name and we split the profits "behind the scenes"? Or is it possible for him to add me to the title after that fact?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated! Thanks in advance!
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@Brian Batista, He needs to take title to the new property as the same taxpayer who sells the old property. If the current property is in his name then he needs to take title to at least as much property as he sold and also in his name. He would not be able to sell as himself and buy as an LLC where both of you are members.
If the property is larger than that then you can take title to any extra %.
For instance, if he sells for $500K and the replacement property is $1 mil. Then he has to take title to 50%. But you could take title to the other 50%. And the two of you would be tenants in common. That would work.
Putting the property in his name and giving you an unrecorded interest might simplify some things. But complicate others. Much depends on his reinvestment requirements.
- Dave Foster
