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SELF DIRECTED IRA FOR REAL ESTATE
While some self directed IRA
trust custodians restrict your investment options,
others allow you to take advantage of the full range
of IRS-permitted assets. Listed below are just some
of the special asset types that self-directed IRAs
can often accommodate:
- Real estate Including single
or multi-family dwellings, apartments, commercial
buildings, raw land, vacation property, condominiums,
mobile homes, etc.
- Trust Deeds / Mortgages, and
Mortgage Pools
- Private Notes and Loans
- Private Stock Offerings
- Limited Liability Corporations
(LLCs)
- Limited Partnerships (LPs)
- Tax Certificates
- Receivables
- Stocks, Bonds, Mutual Funds
- Annuities
- Commercial Paper
- Unit Trusts
ABOUT REAL ESTATE INVESTING WITH YOUR SELF DIRECTED IRAs
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The rules governing allowable investments
in IRAs preclude an IRA's investment in life insurance,
collectibles (e.g., artwork, antiques, metals, gems,
and most coins) and S corporations.
All other types of investments are permitted, and
thus the range of possible investment choices is nearly
unlimited. Consequently, any form of real estate can
be purchased by an IRA.
Real estate investing through an IRA opens up a huge
range of alternative investments for individuals who
are knowledgeable about real estate investing or who
work with knowledgeable advisors, sponsors, or brokers.
Investing in real estate for your retirement may serve
as a means to diversify your retirement portfolio
to hedge against the cyclical changes in the stock
market, economy and bank and government-based investments.
For many who are experienced with real estate investing,
real estate investments hold the potential to protect
against the loss of principal while generating better
than market rate returns through income production
and capital gains. When real estate investments are
not leveraged, both income and capital gains can flow
back to IRAs tax-deferred (or tax-free if the IRA
is a Roth IRA).
If you have your IRA purchase
real estate from an unrelated party and pay cash for
it, and you do not use the real estate for personal
reasons while it is in your IRA (i.e., you treat it
strictly as an investment), there are no special issues.
If your IRA invests in real estate
through a down payment and leveraging, there are some
significant issues:
1. You cannot personally guarantee a loan
for your IRA;
2. Some custodians will limit the amount of debt the
IRA can carry (Most administrators limit is 50%);
3. It may be difficult to get a bank to allow an IRA
to be the debtor without a personal guarantee;
4. Your IRA will pay tax on UDFI (unrelated debt financed
income), which is the income and/or capital gains
attributable to the leveraged portion. (UDFI is taxed
at the trust tax rate because an IRA is a trust.)
As a consequence, although it is PERFECTLY LEGAL, it
may not be desirable to have an IRA carry debt in a
real estate investment transaction.
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1. You cannot directly or indirectly
buy real estate from a "disqualified person".
Who is a disqualified person?
- The IRA owner;
- the IRA owner's spouse, descendant
(e.g., son), or ascendant (e.g., mother);
- spouse of a descendant of
the IRA holder;
- a fiduciary of the IRA or
person providing services to the IRA (e.g., the
trustee or custodian);
- an entity at least 50% of
which is owned (or at least 50% of the beneficial
interests are held) by a combination of the above
(e.g., if you and your spouse own 50% of an LLC,
that LLC is a disqualified person with respect to
your IRA); or
- A 10% owner, officer, or
director or highly compensated employee of such
an entity.
2. You cannot have your IRA
enable an investment for yourself or another disqualified
person. In other words, if the IRA's investment is
deemed essential to accomplishing a transaction in
which both you and your IRA invest, then the transaction
would be considered a prohibited transaction.
3. Your IRA cannot purchase a real estate asset and
then have a disqualified person use it while it is
in the IRA. For example, you cannot buy a vacation
home and use it partly for personal use, even though
you might rent it to unrelated persons the rest of
the year.
Buying real estate from an unrelated party (i.e.,
one who is not a disqualified person) with cash is
the simplest way of investing in real estate with
your IRA. Your IRA can buy raw land, commercial property,
residential (e.g., rental) property, real estate options,
as well as extend loans (e.g., first and second mortgages),
secured by real estate with your IRA, to unrelated
parties.
As discussed above, your IRA can also buy property
through leveraging, provided the loan is not guaranteed
by the IRA owner (or any other disqualified person)
and that the IRA has enough liquidity to support the
mortgage and expenses. Generally, most custodians
will have limits on the amount of leverage they will
permit. Also, as previously mentioned, leveraging
can result in income taxes on UDFI that must be paid
by the IRA. Generally, these taxes are higher than
would be paid on income generated from a property
that you buy and finance personally. In addition,
the UDFI taxes must be paid from funds from the IRA
and, therefore, there has to be enough liquidity in
the IRA to cover these taxes. See IRS Form 990T and
its accompanying instructions for details.
There are a variety of ways, however, that an IRA
can participate in a real estate investment without
a full cash capital investment. For example, your
IRA can co-invest with other parties. You could also
have your IRA, and other parties participate in real
estate investing by becoming members of an LLC that
buys and sells property.
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In summary, the tax laws (1)
require that the investments in an IRA not benefit
the IRA owner and (2) prevent "self-dealing"
between the IRA and the IRA owner or other disqualified
persons. However, by properly structuring an IRA investment
in real estate, an IRA can obtain the benefits of
real estate investment in a manner that complies with
applicable tax laws.
(The foregoing is a general discussion. It is not
intended, and should not be relied upon, as an opinion
or advice on any legal, tax or investment aspects
of IRAs. An IRA owner considering an IRA investment
in real property should consult with your own advisor.)
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Developed by Ovation
Design Group |