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1031 Exchange Success Checklist: Pre-Planning, 45-Day Identification, and 180-Day Closing

Executing a 1031 exchange successfully takes more than just paperwork — it requires strategy, timing, and team coordination.Missing a deadline at any point could mean losing your tax deferral and paying immediate capital gains taxes. Here’s your full checklist to stay on track from before you sell all the way through closing on your replacement property:   ✅ Pre-1031 Exchange Planning (Before Selling Your Property) 1. Engage a Qualified Intermediary (QI): Hire a reputable, experienced QI to manage exchange documentation and hold your proceeds safely. 2. Review Tax and Financial Impacts: Meet with your CPA or tax advisor to model tax deferral benefits, potential boot (cash leftover), and reinvestment needs. 3. Line Up Your Investment Team: Assemble real estate brokers, attorneys, lenders, and property inspectors — all familiar with 1031 timelines. 4. Pre-Identify Potential Replacement Properties: Research target markets, property types, and build a shortlist of viable replacements. Consider both primary and backup options. 5. Pre-Arrange Financing (If Needed): Start pre-approval with lenders to avoid financing delays once your identification period begins. 6. Prepare Contingency Plans: Understand and select the identification rule you plan to use (Three-Property, 200% Rule, or 95% Rule).   ✅ 45-Day Identification Window (Starts Day of Sale Closing) 1. Mark the Identification Deadline Deadline: 45 calendar days from the date your relinquished property closes. 2. Identify Replacement Property in Writing: Submit a written identification to your QI with full legal descriptions — addresses, parcel numbers, etc. 3. Confirm Property Viability: Verify property availability, title status, and financing readiness. Conduct preliminary inspections if possible. 4. Use Backup Properties: Identify backup properties within the chosen rule (especially under the Three-Property or 200% Rule) in case your first choice falls through. 5. Stay Disciplined: Avoid emotional decisions. Only identify properties that meet your investment objectives and due diligence standards. 6. Double-Check IRS Requirements: Ensure your identification list is properly documented and submitted on time — no exceptions or corrections later.   ✅ 180-Day Closing Window (Runs Concurrently After Sale) 1. Mark the Final Closing Deadline Deadline: 180 calendar days from the date of the sale closing. If your tax return is due before 180 days, file an IRS extension to preserve the full closing window. 2. Conduct Final Due Diligence: Complete inspections, surveys, environmental assessments, and title review as quickly as possible. 3. Secure Final Financing (If Applicable): Lock financing terms well before closing dates to prevent lender delays. 4. Coordinate Escrow and Closing: Ensure escrow instructions include language reflecting the 1031 exchange and involve your QI in disbursing funds. 5. Monitor Closing Progress Weekly: Follow a tight closing calendar with your broker, attorney, title company, and lender to prevent last-minute issues. 6. Close and Record Title: The replacement property must be legally transferred — deed recorded — within 180 days to qualify.   🚨 Quick Timeline Snapshot Event Timing Close Sale of Relinquished Property Day 0 Identify Replacement Property By Day 45 Close on Replacement Property By Day 180 (Optional) File IRS Extension If needed to preserve full 180 days   Final Tips for Success Start early — treat pre-sale planning as mandatory, not optional. Communicate constantly with your QI, broker, attorney, and lender. Use backups — assume deals can fall through. Stay organized — deadlines are absolute, and missing one cannot be “fixed” later. With discipline, the right team, and proactive management, your 1031 exchange can be not just a tax-saving move, but a major leap forward for your real estate portfolio.   Printable Checklist Download

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Articles
Peter Locke

8 “Make or break” tax strategies for real estate agents and brokers to round out 2021

Key points in this article: The effects of rising home prices on Real Estate Agents tax liabilities Long-term methods for reducing your overall tax exposure Compensation alternatives that save on taxes We have been meeting with several real estate professionals. Rising home prices are leading to higher commissions and greater tax liability. One common theme has been that each of them thinks, “their CPA has done everything they can to help” but very few of them have installed the tax ecosystem that will help them avoid the most taxes. While the CPAs have done what they can to help identify and capture deductions in the rearview mirror, InSight is working with these real estate professionals to get prepared for 2021 and beyond with far more lucrative options for tax mitigation and investing. Here are the eight tax conscious strategies the real estate agents need to run, not walk, to get set up by the end of the year: Self Directed IRAs – It’s no secret that Real Estate professionals love owning real estate, it’s close to home, they are fluent in the market, and often can front-run great opportunities. While we think there is value in diversity, we don’t think you should break away from something that works. The issue is, we’ve worked with several agents and brokers who see huge gains in the assets in the last decade, only to turn around and give 20%-40% back to the government in the form of capital gains taxes and depreciation recapture. Savvy brokers need to get better about working with a CFP® to make a forward-looking plan to mitigate those taxes and a Self-Directed IRA might be part of that plan.  SEPs, Corporate 401(k) or Solo 401(k) – Most of the brokers we work with are 1099 employees, and if you are, you’re going to have to be in the driver’s seat regarding what method of tax-advantaged savings vehicles you use. What’s unique for Agents we work with, is that the strategy might change from year to year. One of our clients used a SEP in 2019 then a Solo 401(k) in 2020 in order to match the changes in her personal income. This is fine, as each of these methods can work to optimize the savings rate and maximize the success rate of her plan. The key is working closely with their CFP® to know what the year is going to look like, and how best to account for the income. OZ funds – Use your capital gain proceeds from a recent sale and invest it into opportunity zone funds, real estate, or businesses. The benefit now is the ability to defer your current tax liability until 2026 while also receiving tax-free growth on your investment after holding it for 10 years. Real Estate agents often have personal assets that have accrued capital gain liabilities in the past. This is a program that allows them to mitigate the past liability and avoid some of the taxes they will owe as the new asset grows in value.  Diversity – Becoming wealthy and staying wealthy means diversifying your income streams and risk into different sectors, industries, and accounts in order to give investors flexibility with liquidity, estate planning, tax mitigation, and correlation of returns between assets. Several of the agents we work with have had fantastic success with real estate assets which in turn causes them to neglect other, more tax advantageous and growth capable vehicles.  Cash Balance Plans – Great for Real Estate owners that want to “super fund” (2021 Contribution Limit is $281,000) their retirement while simultaneously reducing their tax liability. This is an underutilized strategy for agents. Any of them will have huge years here and there and are without the tax ecosystem to get those big commission checks into a tax advantages account. A single year of being able to set aside over $200k into your tax-advantaged retirement account can make up for about 5-7  years of neglecting it.  Capital Gain Harvesting – Capture gains proactively (death and gifting will soon be realization events). Most of us have heard of tax loss harvesting but an equal and effective way to mitigate future tax liabilities can be to realize gains along the way in order to reset the basis in investments. There will be times when strategically capturing your gains and accepting your losses can help you pay lower taxes each year.  Private Placement Life Insurance – An incredible way to fund a life insurance product that gives you tax-free growth and access to the cash value. The reason Real Estate agents like using this form of tax-free growth is it gives them the freedom and flexibility to fund other real estate ventures, grow their brokerage, or find other investments.   Many of these methods can be used for most small business owners and entrepreneurs, but for real estate agents working in this climate of elevated home prices these are our “run don’t walk” ideas for getting yourself in the best possible tax position through the end of the year. 

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Articles
Peter Locke

Sudden Wealth Planning

For those that are thinking about passing wealth on, they must think about how they want that wealth to be spent. For the people that are inheriting wealth, you may have other ideas in mind.  Both people have their own goals and understanding them prior to the actual event happening is important to plan for. By Peter Locke, CFP® In our podcasts and our articles, we speak at length about the three Ps.  And no, we’re not referring to the PPP loans. We’re talking about defining the People that help you, the Process to get you to your goals, and Policies you implement to hold you accountable along the way. Luckily, with everything we do at InSight, we still hold true to our three Ps. People – an heir should surround themselves with people that can help them manage this scenario. By having a professional advisor or consultant, an heir can ensure that they act responsibly with that money in order to make the best decisions possible. Process – When an heir receives money, what happens next.  What are your immediate actionable steps you will take when you receive a lump sum of money or assets. Implement the right procedures prior to the inheritance so you make good decisions. Policy – heirs need to hold themselves accountable. Defining what that looks like can mean different things to different people but overall how will you make sure you do what you said you would do when this happens.  By surrounding yourself with the right people and processes you’ve taken the first two steps now it’s time to implement and monitor. By maintaining your focus on the three Ps, you can stay in line with your values and long term goals instead of getting distracted with what you could buy or do with the inheritance. There is a reason why the majority of people that win the lottery or make a lot of money in sports early run out of money quickly and have nothing to show for it. You may think it won’t happen to you but those are famous last words. With these three Ps, your likelihood of running into problems goes down drastically. The biggest fear parents should have is how unstructured wealth transfers can have damaging effects on heirs and this is due to poor communication and trust. Parents should be preparing heirs about their relationship with money and what it means to them to educate them about best practices and things to stay away from. To teach heirs from an early age about your beliefs about money and good financial practices you can instill generational knowledge to pass down. This is a great time to bring on a third party professional to educate you and your family about how to have these conversations even when you think maturity is an issue. Waiting until you’re (the donor) older leads to quicker conversations instead of good healthy conversations that last over a long time that become part of our children’s subconscious thoughts which leads to better financial decisions. At InSight, we take teaching you how to talk to your children at an early age very seriously. These early and frequent conversations lead to our clients having the confidence to talk to their children about good money habits so that when they’re older they can rest in peace knowing their heirs have a strong foundation to lean on when they inevitably inherit your wealth. If you’re an heir and you have a lot of debt and little savings, paying off your debt may seem like a good idea but academically speaking might not be your best option for two reasons. One, it may give you a false sense of accomplishment that you paid off your debt by living within your means and staying disciplined.  Two, if your interest on your debt is very low then keeping your debt and making minimum payments may be a better long term option. Also, buying that new car or set of golf clubs because they’re really nice won’t give you true happiness. It instead may make you more unhappy because it doesn’t represent your values, it represents what you think other people care about. I have seen first hand how money affects your ability to make rational decisions, especially a sudden increase in wealth. Although the immediate dopamine hit you’ll get from a quick material purchase will be great, you’ll soon realize that you’re now in possession of an erosive debt instead of an accretive debt and your dopamine high will fade away as you pour money into trying to find the next thing. At Insight, we’re your people, we help design the processes for your plan and your heirs plan, and we create the policies to keep you moving in the right direction. For example, parents may be concerned with the negative effects an inheritance could have on their children’s drive and ambition to get ahead, desire for material things, relationship with money, relationships with friends and partners, or just spending beyond their means. With our InSight-full® plan, you and your family get the type of help that you need to make sure your money is used the way you want it to and is protected as much as possible.

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