Real Estate Legal Services:
Structuring, Agreements, and Strategy
Entity formation, purchase agreements, tax-deferred exchanges, and STR compliance. As an operator who manages short-term rentals, I bring practical experience to the table — understanding both the legal and operational sides of real estate investment.
Entity Structuring and Asset Protection
The single most consequential decision in real estate investing is often made before the first offer: how to hold title. The wrong entity structure exposes your personal assets, creates adverse tax treatment, and complicates future transfers. The right one insulates properties from each other, preserves pass-through taxation, and survives a creditor attack.
For most real estate investors, the LLC is the vehicle of choice — but the jurisdiction and structure matter considerably. Delaware LLCs offer the strongest statutory charging order protection under 6 Del. C. § 18-703, limiting a creditor's remedy against a member's interest to a charging order (no foreclosure, no voting rights). California LLCs are governed by the California Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act (Cal. Corp. Code § 17701 et seq.) and impose an annual franchise tax and gross receipts fee that Delaware entities can sometimes avoid. Texas entities benefit from a similarly strong charging order statute under Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 101.112, which explicitly limits a judgment creditor to a charging order as the exclusive remedy.
Structuring Issues We Routinely Address:
- Single-property LLCs vs. portfolio entities: Whether to isolate each property in its own LLC (maximum liability separation) or consolidate for administrative simplicity — a function of property count, equity levels, and lender requirements
- Series LLC structures: Available in Delaware, Texas, and several other states — a single entity with segregated "series" cells, each holding separate assets and liabilities, without the overhead of multiple registered entities
- Land trusts and title holding: Illinois-style land trusts and similar structures for privacy, probate avoidance, and simplified transfer of beneficial interests without triggering due-on-sale clauses
- Operating agreement drafting: Membership interest transfers, buy-sell provisions, manager authority limits, and capital call mechanics — particularly important for multi-member investment partnerships
- Foreign investor structuring: Holding structure design for non-U.S. persons investing in U.S. real property, including FIRPTA withholding obligations and treaty analysis
Tax-Deferred Transactions: 1031 Exchanges, FIRPTA, and Opportunity Zones
Real estate is one of the few asset classes where the tax code provides multiple deferral and exclusion mechanisms. Used correctly, these provisions can eliminate — not just defer — capital gains tax on appreciated property. Used incorrectly, they collapse and generate unexpected taxable events.
Section 1031 Like-Kind Exchanges (26 U.S.C. § 1031)
A properly structured 1031 exchange allows a taxpayer to defer recognition of capital gain on the sale of investment real property by reinvesting the proceeds into "like-kind" replacement property. The rules are strict: the replacement property must be identified within 45 days of closing the relinquished property sale, and the exchange must close within 180 days. Boot (cash or non-like-kind property received) is taxable to the extent of gain. Depreciation recapture under § 1250 is not eliminated by a 1031 exchange — it carries forward into the replacement property's basis. We structure exchanges, qualify qualified intermediaries, and advise on reverse and improvement exchanges where the standard forward exchange timeline cannot be met.
FIRPTA Withholding (26 U.S.C. § 1445)
The Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act requires buyers of U.S. real property interests from foreign persons to withhold 15% of the amount realized (not gain — the total sale price) and remit it to the IRS. Failure to withhold makes the buyer personally liable for the tax. Exemptions exist — including for sales under $300,000 to buyers who will use the property as a personal residence — but the conditions are specific and must be documented. We advise both foreign sellers on FIRPTA planning and buyers on withholding obligations and exemption qualification.
Qualified Opportunity Zones (26 U.S.C. § 1400Z-2)
Opportunity Zone investments allow taxpayers to defer and potentially reduce capital gain (from any source, not just real estate) by reinvesting into a Qualified Opportunity Fund within 180 days of the triggering sale. Gains held in a QOF for at least 10 years receive a stepped-up basis to fair market value — eliminating tax on appreciation inside the fund entirely. The regulations governing QOFs are complex and the compliance requirements ongoing; we advise investors on fund structuring and ongoing qualification.
Short-Term Rental Compliance and Purchase Agreements
Short-term rental regulations have proliferated at the municipal level, and they vary enough city to city that a property viable as an STR in one neighborhood may be prohibited three blocks away. Due diligence on STR viability is now a material part of any investment acquisition for properties intended for that use.
- Municipal STR ordinances: City-level licensing, owner-occupancy requirements, permit caps, and platform reporting mandates (e.g., Dallas City Code Chapter 42B, Los Angeles Home-Sharing Ordinance, Austin STR regulations under City Code Title 25) — we perform zoning and ordinance review as part of acquisition diligence
- HOA and CC&R restrictions: Many communities prohibit or materially restrict STR activity through covenants, conditions, and restrictions that survive title transfer — these must be reviewed in purchase diligence, not discovered after closing
- Purchase agreement review and negotiation: Contingencies specific to investment acquisitions — STR viability, rental income verification, zoning confirmation, and representations from sellers regarding existing permits and tenant status
- Commercial real estate transactions: Letter of intent drafting, purchase and sale agreement negotiation, due diligence coordination, title and survey review, and closing documentation for income-producing commercial properties
- Lease drafting and landlord-tenant matters: Commercial leases, NNN structures, CAM reconciliation provisions, and lease assignment and subletting restrictions that affect property value at resale
The Process.
Step 1: Discovery
We start with your goals — acquisition, restructuring, or new entity formation — and map the legal and tax structure that fits your situation before anything is signed.
Step 2: Structuring & Strategy
Entity formation, operating agreement drafting, and purchase agreement negotiation — structured to protect your assets, optimize your tax position, and survive a creditor challenge.
Step 3: Execution
From contract review through closing, we handle the legal side of the transaction while you focus on the deal — including coordination with title, lenders, and qualified intermediaries on exchanges.
Return on Investment.
As an active short-term rental operator, I understand that the legal structure either makes or costs you money. The goal is to get it right the first time.

Ready to move forward with your real estate plans?
Let's discuss entity structuring, purchase agreements, and tax strategy for your next acquisition.
