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1031 Change Calculatrice

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Qu'est-ce que 1031 Exchange Calculator?

A 1031 exchange can defer a very large capital-gains tax bill when an investor sells one business or investment property and reinvests into another qualifying property. The strategy gets its name from Section 1031 of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code, and it matters because real-estate investors often have decades of appreciation and depreciation recapture built into a property by the time they sell. Without an exchange, part of the sale proceeds may be lost immediately to federal and state taxes. With a properly structured exchange, that tax is generally deferred so more equity stays invested and continues compounding in the replacement property. This calculator helps you estimate realized gain, how much equity must be rolled forward, whether you may have taxable boot, and how much gain is likely to be deferred. Investors, real-estate agents, qualified intermediaries, CPAs, attorneys, and portfolio planners use these numbers when comparing sale scenarios. In plain English, the idea is simple: if you sell qualifying investment real estate, use a qualified intermediary, identify replacement property on time, and reinvest enough value and equity, you may defer current tax instead of cashing out. The details are where people get into trouble. Exchange periods are strict, primary residences do not qualify the same way investment property does, and receiving cash back, reducing debt without replacing it, or buying lower-value replacement property can create taxable boot. A calculator does not replace tax advice, but it gives you a fast first-pass estimate before you talk with your intermediary or tax professional.

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Formule

f(x)Realized gain = Net sale price - Adjusted basis, where net sale price is sale price minus selling costs. Taxable boot is generally the lesser of realized gain or the cash and net debt relief you receive. Deferred gain = Realized gain - Taxable boot. To achieve full deferral, investors usually buy replacement property of equal or greater value and reinvest all net proceeds. Worked example: if sale price is $800,000, selling costs are $40,000, and adjusted basis is $400,000, then realized gain = ($800,000 - $40,000) - $400,000 = $360,000. If no cash boot is taken and debt is fully replaced, taxable boot may be $0, so deferred gain is about $360,000.

Légende des variables

SymboleNomUnitéDescription
Realized gainCalculated as NetCalculated as Net sale price - Adjusted basis
Deferred gainCalculated as RealizedCalculated as Realized gain - Taxable boot
then realized gainCalculatedCalculated as ($800

Comment 1031 Exchange Calculator

  1. 1Enter the sale price, adjusted basis, mortgage payoff, and exchange-related selling costs for the property you are giving up.
  2. 2Add the price and financing details for the replacement property so the calculator can compare value replaced with value sold.
  3. 3The calculator estimates realized gain by subtracting adjusted basis and selling expenses from the net amount realized on the sale.
  4. 4It then checks for potential boot, which is usually cash received, debt reduction that is not replaced, or replacement property value that is too low.
  5. 5Review the estimated taxable boot, deferred gain, and reinvestment target before committing to an exchange structure.
  6. 6Use the result as a planning tool only and confirm deadlines, basis, depreciation recapture, and final tax treatment with a qualified intermediary and tax advisor.

Exemples résolus

Exemple 1Fully deferred trade into a larger rental
Donné:Relinquished sale price $800,000, adjusted basis $400,000, selling costs $40,000, old loan payoff $200,000, replacement purchase $900,000, new loan $250,000
Résultat:Estimated realized gain $360,000, taxable boot $0, deferred gain about $360,000

Because the replacement property is higher in value and the investor replaces the debt while rolling forward equity, the exchange is structured for full deferral. Taxes are deferred, not forgiven, so the deferred gain still matters for future basis planning.

Exemple 2Cash boot from taking money out at closing
Donné:Sale price $700,000, adjusted basis $350,000, selling costs $35,000, mortgage payoff $150,000, replacement purchase $700,000, cash taken out $50,000
Résultat:Estimated realized gain $315,000, taxable boot up to $50,000, deferred gain about $265,000

The investor still defers most of the gain, but the cash received back is usually taxable boot. This is a common planning mistake when someone wants partial liquidity.

Exemple 3Trading down into a lower-value property
Donné:Sale price $1,000,000, adjusted basis $520,000, selling costs $60,000, old loan payoff $300,000, replacement purchase $850,000, new loan $250,000
Résultat:Estimated realized gain $420,000, potential boot from lower value and reduced debt, partial deferral only

Buying down in value usually creates taxable gain because not all sale proceeds are rolled into replacement real estate. The calculator helps show how far the investor is from full deferral.

Exemple 4Small investor exchanging one rental condo for raw land
Donné:Sale price $300,000, adjusted basis $180,000, selling costs $18,000, mortgage payoff $0, replacement purchase $310,000, all proceeds reinvested
Résultat:Estimated realized gain $102,000, taxable boot $0, deferred gain about $102,000

For federal tax purposes, many kinds of U.S. real property held for investment are considered like-kind to each other. Even so, the investor still has to satisfy identification, timing, and intermediary rules.

Applications pratiques

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Professional 1031 exchange calc estimation and planning

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Academic and educational calculations

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Feasibility analysis and decision support

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Quick verification of manual calculations

Cas particuliers

A primary residence does not qualify the same way an investment property does,

A primary residence does not qualify the same way an investment property does, so mixed-use or recently converted properties need careful tax analysis before an exchange is attempted.

Reverse, improvement, and build-to-suit exchanges follow additional structuring

Reverse, improvement, and build-to-suit exchanges follow additional structuring rules and should be modeled with a qualified intermediary and tax professional rather than treated like a simple delayed exchange.

When input values approach zero or become negative, the 1031 Exchange

When input values approach zero or become negative, the 1031 Exchange Calculator calculation may produce undefined or misleading results. Always validate that inputs fall within the model's valid range before interpreting outputs. Extreme values should be flagged for manual review.

1031 Exchange Quick Rules

RuleTargetWhy It Matters
Identification period45 daysReplacement property must be identified on time
Exchange completion period180 daysLate closing usually disqualifies the exchange
Replacement valueEqual or greater than property soldHelps avoid value-related boot
Equity reinvestedAll net proceedsCash taken out is often taxable boot
Debt replacedEqual or greater debt, or offset with cashUnreplaced debt can create taxable boot

Questions fréquentes

Q

What is a 1031 Exchange Calculator?

A

A 1031 exchange can defer a very large capital-gains tax bill when an investor sells one business or investment property and reinvests into another qualifying property. The strategy gets its name from Section 1031 of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code, and it matters because real-estate investors often have decades of appreciation and depreciation recapture built into a property by the time they sell. Without an exchange, part of the sale proceeds may be lost immediately to federal and state taxes. With a properly structured exchange, that tax is generally deferred so more equity stays invested and continues compounding in the replacement property. This calculator helps you estimate realized gain, how much equity must be rolled forward, whether you may have taxable boot, and how much gain is likely to be deferred. Investors, real-estate agents, qualified intermediaries, CPAs, attorneys, and portfolio planners use these numbers when comparing sale scenarios. In plain English, the idea is simple: if you sell qualifying investment real estate, use a qualified intermediary, identify replacement property on time, and reinvest enough value and equity, you may defer current tax instead of cashing out. The details are where people get into trouble. Exchange periods are strict, primary residences do not qualify the same way investment property does, and receiving cash back, reducing debt without replacing it, or buying lower-value replacement property can create taxable boot. A calculator does not replace tax advice, but it gives you a fast first-pass estimate before you talk with your intermediary or tax professional.

Q

How does the 1031 Exchange Calculator work?

A

Enter the sale price, adjusted basis, mortgage payoff, and exchange-related selling costs for the property you are giving up. Then: Add the price and financing details for the replacement property so the calculator can compare value replaced with value sold. Then: The calculator estimates realized gain by subtracting adjusted basis and selling expenses from the net amount realized on the sale. Then: It then checks for potential boot, which is usually cash received, debt reduction that is not replaced, or replacement property value that is too low..

Q

Can you give an example of how to use the 1031 Exchange Calculator?

A

Example: Input Relinquished sale price $800,000, adjusted basis $400,000, selling costs $40,000, old loan payoff $200,000, replacement purchase $900,000, new loan $250,000 gives a result of Estimated realized gain $360,000, taxable boot $0, deferred gain about $360,000.

Q

Is the 1031 Exchange Calculator free to use?

A

Yes — completely free with no registration, download, or subscription required. All calculations happen instantly in your browser.

Q

How accurate is the 1031 Exchange Calculator?

A

Our 1031 Exchange Calculator uses verified mathematical formulas and is accurate to multiple decimal places. Results are calculated in real-time using the same methods used by professionals.

Q

Can I use this 1031 Exchange Calculator for real financial decisions?

A

This calculator is for educational and estimation purposes. For major financial decisions — especially mortgages, investments, or tax planning — always consult a qualified financial adviser.

Erreurs courantes à éviter

  • !Using incorrect or mismatched units for input values
  • !Forgetting to account for edge cases or boundary conditions
  • !Rounding intermediate values too early in the calculation
  • !Not verifying that input values fall within valid ranges for 1031 exchange calc
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Conseil Pro

To target full tax deferral, investors generally try to buy replacement property of equal or greater value and reinvest all net proceeds while replacing any debt paid off on the old property.

Le saviez-vous?

The modern delayed 1031 exchange traces back to the 1979 Starker case, which helped shape the deferred-exchange structure investors use today.

📖Difficulté:Débutant
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À titre informatif uniquement. Cet outil ne constitue pas un conseil financier. Consultez un conseiller financier qualifié avant de prendre des décisions d'investissement ou financières.
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Reviewed July 2026
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