1031 exchanges can save huge taxes, but they are not always the right move. The costs, timelines, and strict rules mean that sometimes paying the tax and moving on is the smarter choice. This guide shows when a 1031 exchange makes sense in 2026, when it does not, and how to decide with clear math.
Summary A 1031 exchange makes sense when your taxable gain is large, you plan to keep investing in real estate, and the exchange costs are lower than the tax savings. It usually does not make sense for small gains, tight timelines, or when you want cash out.
Table of Contents
- Quick Answer: Should You Do a 1031 Exchange?
- The SENSE Framework
- Break-Even Math: A Simple Test
- Tax Savings Estimator Table
- When a 1031 Exchange Makes Sense
- When It Usually Does Not
- Investor Profiles and Scenarios
- Alternatives to a 1031 Exchange
- Timeline and Execution Risk
- Step-by-Step Decision Checklist
- Common Mistakes and Opportunity Costs
- Recordkeeping Checklist
- State Tax Considerations
- FAQs
- Updated for 2026: What to Watch
- Change Log
Quick Answer: Should You Do a 1031 Exchange?
You should consider a 1031 exchange if:
- Your gain is significant
- You want to keep investing in real estate
- You can meet the 45-day and 180-day deadlines
- The replacement property improves your long-term portfolio
If you need cash or want to exit real estate, a 1031 exchange may not be the right tool.
For the full mechanics, see 1031 Exchanges Explained.
The SENSE Framework
Use SENSE to decide:
S = Size of gain is large enough
E = Exchange costs are justified
N = Next property is a strong upgrade
S = Speed fits your timeline
E = Exit goals align with long-term hold
Caption: If one of the SENSE steps fails, reconsider the exchange.
Break-Even Math: A Simple Test
Compare the estimated taxes to the total exchange costs.
Estimated tax bill without exchange:
- Capital gains tax on the gain
- Depreciation recapture tax
- State taxes
Exchange costs include:
- Qualified intermediary fee
- Additional closing costs
- Potential higher purchase price to meet like-kind and value rules
If tax savings are much larger than total costs, the exchange is more likely worth it.
Tax Savings Estimator Table
Use this simplified estimator to see if the exchange is in the right ballpark. Actual taxes depend on your bracket and state.
| Estimated Gain | Possible Federal Tax + Recapture | Typical Exchange Costs | Likely Worth It? | |---:|---:|---:|---| | $50,000 | $10,000 to $17,000 | $4,000 to $7,000 | Maybe | | $150,000 | $30,000 to $50,000 | $5,000 to $9,000 | Often | | $300,000 | $60,000 to $100,000 | $6,000 to $12,000 | Usually |
This table assumes you have meaningful depreciation recapture exposure. If you have little depreciation, the savings may be smaller.
When a 1031 Exchange Makes Sense
1. Large gains or large recapture exposure
If depreciation recapture is big, deferring it can preserve capital.
2. You want to scale your portfolio
Exchanging into a larger or better-performing property can compound returns.
3. You are moving to a better market
A 1031 exchange can help you shift from a weak rental market to a stronger one without immediate taxes.
4. You want to consolidate or diversify
Sell multiple small properties and buy one larger asset, or sell one and buy multiple replacements.
5. You plan to hold long-term
The longer you hold, the more valuable the tax deferral becomes.
When It Usually Does Not
1. Small gains
If the gain is small, the exchange costs can erase the benefit.
2. You need cash out
A 1031 requires reinvesting all proceeds. If you want liquidity, it is a poor fit.
3. You cannot meet the deadlines
Missing the 45-day or 180-day rules ends the exchange.
4. You are exiting real estate
If you want to move into stocks or a business, a 1031 will not help.
5. You are unsure about the replacement property
A bad replacement deal can outweigh tax savings.
Investor Profiles and Scenarios
Scenario 1: Portfolio Builder
Gain: $250,000
Exchange costs: $6,000
Goal: Buy larger multi-family
Result: Exchange makes sense.
Scenario 2: Retiring Landlord
Gain: $90,000
Goal: Cash out for retirement
Result: Exchange likely not worth it.
Scenario 3: Market Switch
Gain: $180,000
Goal: Move from slow-growth market to higher-yield market
Result: Exchange can accelerate portfolio performance.
Alternatives to a 1031 Exchange
If a 1031 does not fit, consider:
- Paying tax and reinvesting with a clean slate
- Opportunity Zone investments (deferral and potential exclusion)
- Installment sales to spread gains over time
- Primary residence conversion in some scenarios (with careful planning)
See Opportunity Zones Explained if you want a deferral alternative.
Timeline and Execution Risk
The 45-day identification and 180-day closing windows are strict. This creates risk if:
- Inventory in your target market is limited
- Financing takes longer than expected
- You lose a replacement property after inspection
If you cannot close on time, the exchange fails and you owe the full tax.
Try the tool
Step-by-Step Decision Checklist
- Estimate your taxable gain and recapture.
- Estimate total exchange costs.
- Compare tax savings to costs.
- Confirm you can meet the 45-day and 180-day deadlines.
- Evaluate replacement property quality.
- Confirm long-term hold strategy.
Recordkeeping Checklist
Keep a clean file with:
- Basis and depreciation schedules
- Sale closing statement
- QI agreement and identification letters
- Replacement property contract and closing statement
- Loan documents and debt payoff details
State Tax Considerations
Some states do not fully conform to federal 1031 rules or require withholding at sale. Include state taxes in your break-even math to avoid underestimating the benefit.
Mid-post CTA: Save your gain calculations, basis schedule, and 1031 paperwork in a single PDF folder before closing.
Common Mistakes and Opportunity Costs
- Doing an exchange just to avoid taxes, then buying a weak property
- Underestimating timelines and missing deadlines
- Ignoring state taxes that may reduce savings
- Misjudging the cost of carrying a larger mortgage
FAQs
Can I partially exchange and take some cash?
Yes, but the cash is taxable boot.
Is a 1031 exchange worth it for a $30,000 gain?
Often no, unless your tax savings significantly exceed the exchange costs.
What if my replacement property costs less?
You may owe tax on the difference as boot.
Updated for 2026: What to Watch
For 2026, monitor:
- Potential changes to like-kind exchange rules
- State conformity to federal exchanges
- IRS guidance on replacement property identification
Change Log
- 2026-02-19: Initial 2026 edition with SENSE framework and break-even math.
Sources: IRS Section 1031 guidance, IRS Publication 544, state tax conformity updates.