A forward exchange -- also called a delayed exchange -- is the most common type of 1031 exchange. It allows you to sell an investment or business property, defer the capital gains taxes you would normally owe, and reinvest the full proceeds into a replacement property of equal or greater value.
Here's how it works: You sell your current property (the "relinquished property") and have the proceeds held by a Qualified Intermediary. Then, within specific timeframes set by the IRS, you identify potential replacement properties and complete the purchase of one or more of them. Because you never take constructive receipt of the sale proceeds, the IRS treats it as a continuous investment rather than a taxable event.
The forward exchange accounts for roughly 95% of all 1031 exchanges completed each year. Its popularity comes from its flexibility -- you're not required to find a buyer who also has property to exchange. You sell to any willing buyer, then purchase from any willing seller. This opens the door to virtually any property on the market, giving you maximum control over your next investment.
The IRS establishes two non-negotiable deadlines that every forward exchange must follow. Miss either one, and your exchange fails -- you'll owe taxes on your entire gain.
The 45-Day Identification Period
Starting the day after you close on your relinquished property, you have 45 calendar days to identify potential replacement properties. This is not 45 business days. Weekends and holidays count. The clock keeps ticking regardless of what else is happening in your life or in the market.
During this window, you must submit a written identification to your Qualified Intermediary listing the properties you're considering. You can change your mind and revoke identifications within the 45 days, but once midnight strikes on day 45, your list is locked.
The 180-Day Exchange Period
You have 180 calendar days from the sale of your relinquished property to complete the purchase of your replacement property. This deadline runs concurrently with the 45-day identification period, not after it. So if you identify a property on day 45, you still only have 135 days left to close.
These deadlines are carved in stone. The IRS does not grant extensions for illness, market conditions, financing delays, or natural disasters. The only exception is if the President declares a federally disaster-affected area, and even then, extensions are limited and specific.
The IRS gives you three methods for identifying replacement properties. You must follow one of them exactly -- no mixing and matching.
The Three-Property Rule (Most Common)
You can identify up to three properties regardless of their total value. You could identify a $500,000 condo, a $2 million apartment building, and a $5 million commercial center. As long as you close on one or more of them, you're compliant.
The 200% Rule
You can identify any number of properties as long as their combined fair market value does not exceed 200% of the relinquished property's sale price. If you sold for $1 million, you could identify ten properties worth $100,000 each.
The 95% Rule
You can identify any number of properties at any value, but you must acquire 95% of the total identified value. This rule is rarely used because it's risky -- if one deal falls through, you could fail the entire exchange.
Real-World Example
Maria Chen sold a rental duplex in Phoenix for $850,000. Using the Three-Property Rule, she identified: (1) a $400,000 single-family rental in Austin, (2) a $500,000 fourplex in Nashville, and (3) a $350,000 condo in Denver. She closed on the Austin property and the Nashville fourplex within 180 days, completing a successful exchange and deferring approximately $180,000 in combined federal and state capital gains taxes.