WHAT DO I LOOK FOR WHEN SELECTING A
QUALIFIED INTERMEDIARY
There has never been a better time for a properly structured
real estate Exchangethen today.
We can now breathe a sigh of relief with the advent of the
ExchangeRegulations, which have provided the flexibility and
certainty that were arguably lacking in the past.
The Internal Revenue Service has been very accommodating in
providing a reasonable structure to follow when structuring real
estate Exchanges through the ExchangeRegulations.
But the IRS has served notice on the tax and real estate
community that they will be watching the real estate Exchangearea, and are requiring that the guidelines of the ExchangeRegulations be followed in all aspects.
It is imperative that taxpayers (sellers) observe the
established guidelines to insure the integrity of the proposed
real estate Exchangetransaction.
Also, it’s important to make use of real professionals who
have an understanding and are experienced in structuring real
estate Exchanges based on the ExchangeRegulations.
The most important person involved in structuring real estate
Exchanges today is the “qualified intermediary.” The
qualified intermediary represents the taxpayer (seller) and
becomes the quarterback of the proposed Exchangetransaction.
The qualified intermediary should be carefully chosen so that
the Exchangecan be defensible. As principal in the Exchangetransaction, the qualified intermediary will be as responsible
as the taxpayer (seller) for performance of contractural
obligations in the relinquished and replacement properties.
The qualified intermediary should be a corporation instead of
an individual primarily because death or incapacity of an
individual intermediary would affect a real estate Exchange.
Probate, for example, could delay timely closing of the
replacement property and blow the Exchangetransaction.
A professional qualified intermediary, properly trained, will
indentify problems before they threaten an Exchangetransaction.
Having specialized training in negotiation, contract law,
taxation, investment analysis, escrow procedure and real estate
practice, as well as having a proven success record in
structuring real estate Exchanges based on the ExchangeRegulations, are extremely valuable when problems arise.
When other individuals in the transaction- such as the real
estate professional, attorney or accountant- don’t have an
understanding of how the Exchangetransaction needs to be
structured, a qualified intermediary can save the day!
Who cannot be a qualified intermediary? You (the taxpayer
(seller); your agent or agents; or anyone who, within a two-year
period of the Exchangetransaction, acted as your real estate
agent/broker, attorney, accountant/CPA, mortgage banker/broker
or investment/financial advisor/broker in any capacity.
In addition, employees, siblings, spouse, ancestors, lineal
descendants, a corporation, trust or partnership of which you
are a controlling partner, stockholder or beneficiary are all
labeled a “disqualified person” which would invalidate the
Exchangetransaction.
Since the qualified intermediary is the most important part
of a real estate Exchange, it’s important to know whom you are
dealing with. You should ask questions such as: How long has the
qualified intermediary been in business; do they provide
qualified intermediary services only on a full-time or part-time
basis to supplement their income (and in return do you get
part-time service); or are you their guinea pig? Do they have
any formal training or a professional designation in real estate
exchanging such as the CEA- Certified ExchangeAdvisor- offered
through the American Institute of Real Estate Exchangors? Also
is the qualified intermediary bonded so that you can relax
knowing your funds will be there when you need them?
It’s amazing the number of people who only want to know how
much a qualified intermediary charges, and then picks one who
charges the least rather than knowing what services are being
provided and whether the intermediary knows what they are doing.
You may save a few dollars, but will the IRS accept that as an
excuse if the Exchangeis handled incorrectly?
Don’t just shop for price. You wouldn’t do the same when
choosing a doctor or an attorney, so why should that be any
different when choosing someone to handle what might be your
largest investment? Your Exchangecan only be done once. Make
sure it’s done right the first time.
Today, with the guidelines of the ExchangeRegulations and
the help of a properly trained and experienced professional
qualified intermediary, the taxpayer (seller) can sleep nights
when using the “best kept secret in real estate-real estate
Exchanges.”
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