Yes, you can absolutely buy multiple properties with a single 1031 exchange. This is one of the most common ways investors diversify—selling one large "relinquished" property to buy several smaller "replacement" properties.
To do this successfully, you must navigate three specific IRS rules for identifying those properties.
1. The Three Identification Rules
You must choose one of these rules to follow by Day 45. You cannot mix and match them.
- The 3-Property Rule: This is the most common. You can identify up to three properties of any value. You can buy one, two, or all three.
- The 200% Rule: You can identify an unlimited number of properties, but their combined total value cannot exceed 200% of the value of the property you sold.
- Example: If you sold a building for $1M, you could identify ten $200k condos (Total: $2M).
- The 95% Exception Rule: You can identify as many properties as you want, even if they exceed 200% value, but only if you actually close on 95% of the total value identified. This is very risky and rarely used because if one deal falls through, the whole exchange fails.
- Total Purchase Price: The total cost of all new properties combined must be equal to or greater than the sale price of the old property.
- Reinvesting Equity: You must reinvest all the net cash proceeds.
- Matching Debt: If you had a mortgage on the old property, you must either take out a similar amount of debt on the new properties or offset the difference with extra cash.
- You could buy three $500k rental houses.
- Total Value: $1.5M (Matches sale price).
- Equity: $1M (All cash reinvested).
- Debt: $500k (Spread across the three houses).
3. Critical Timing for Multiple Properties If you are buying three different houses from three different sellers, the timeline does not reset for each one.- Day 45: All potential properties must be identified.
- Day 180: All closings must be finished.
- The Trap: Your 45-day and 180-day clocks start the moment the first property closes. If you sell Property A in January and Property B in March, your deadlines are based on the January sale. This puts immense pressure on you to close the March sale and the final purchase quickly.