Tax Strategy
The 1031 exchange is one of the most powerful tools available to real estate investors — and one of the least understood. When executed correctly, it allows you to sell an investment property, defer the capital gains tax on that sale, and deploy the full proceeds into a replacement property. Done over a lifetime of investing, it can compound wealth in a way that paying taxes on each sale simply cannot.
This article explains how the 1031 process works, whether an ORG lot might qualify as a replacement property, and what your professional team needs to know before you start the clock.
This article is educational, not legal or tax advice. 1031 exchanges involve complex rules with strict deadlines. Work with a qualified intermediary, an experienced CPA, and a real estate attorney before making any decisions.
Section 1031 of the Internal Revenue Code allows a taxpayer to defer recognition of capital gains when they sell a property held for investment or productive use in a trade or business, and reinvest the proceeds into another qualifying like-kind property within specific time windows.
"Like-kind" is broader than most people think. It does not mean you have to sell a cabin and buy a cabin, or sell a duplex and buy a duplex. For real property, like-kind essentially means any real property held for investment or business use can be exchanged for any other real property held for the same purpose. An apartment building can exchange into raw land. A commercial building can exchange into a rental home.
Whether an ORG lot qualifies depends on how it is held and used — specifically, whether it is being held as an investment property (with rental intent) rather than primarily for personal use. This is a factual and legal question, not a general rule, and it is exactly the kind of determination your CPA and attorney need to make based on your specific situation.
A QI must be in place before closing on your relinquished property. You cannot receive the proceeds yourself — they must go directly to the QI. This step cannot be added after the fact.
The clock starts the moment your sale closes. Both deadlines below run from this date, not from any other milestone.
You must identify in writing up to three potential replacement properties within 45 days. This deadline is absolute — missing it disqualifies the exchange.
You must close on the replacement property within 180 days of your original sale. This window runs concurrently with the identification period — it does not restart at day 45.
Lots at ORG can move quickly when they're priced well. If you're in a 1031 window, having a specific lot identified and a purchase agreement in hand before your 45-day deadline is far safer than waiting to find one under time pressure.
Many ORG lots come to market with a camper already in place. For a 1031 buyer, this has practical advantages. A lot-and-camper package is often turn-key — it can be listed on rental platforms immediately after closing, which strengthens the investment intent documentation that matters for the exchange. It also gives you a complete asset to identify during your 45-day window rather than a vacant lot that still needs a unit.
From a tax strategy standpoint, the camper also opens a separate conversation with your CPA: depreciation. Land cannot be depreciated, but the camper — treated as personal property — can be depreciated on an accelerated schedule. Your accountant can allocate a portion of the purchase price to the camper and potentially create meaningful deductions in the early years of ownership, separate from and in addition to the 1031 deferral on the land.
For a 1031 to hold up, the replacement property must be held for investment or productive use in a trade or business. ORG owners who actively list their lots for short-term rental, keep records of rental activity, and use the property for personal use only in a limited, documented way are generally positioned well. Owners who primarily use the property personally and occasionally rent it are in murkier territory.
The IRS has not issued a bright-line rule on what percentage of use must be rental vs. personal, but the direction of intent from the start matters significantly. If your plan is to rent the lot actively and use it personally for a portion of each year, document that intent from day one — in writing, in your listing, and in your operational records.
I'm an owner at Outdoor Resorts Gatlinburg and a licensed Tennessee real estate agent. I can help you identify available lots quickly and connect you with what you need to make your timeline work.
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