Arizona 1031 Exchange
Why Arizona Investors Use a 1031 Exchange
When you sell an Arizona investment or business property at a gain, the tax can take a large share. Arizona taxes capital gains as ordinary income at a flat 2.5%, but that still sits on top of the federal bill: capital gains of up to 20%, the 3.8% net investment income tax, and up to 25% on depreciation recapture (the tax owed on deductions you already took). On a $500,000 gain, the federal tax alone can pass $124,000 before Arizona adds its share. A properly structured 1031 exchange, which lets you sell one investment property and reinvest in another while deferring the tax, can defer all of it.
Arizona keeps the process straightforward. It conforms to the federal 1031 rules, so a valid exchange that defers your federal gain defers the Arizona gain too. The state requires no withholding at closing and has no claw-back or annual reporting after you exchange into property in another state. As your qualified intermediary, we coordinate the documents with your closing agent and CPA so the paperwork is right the first time. For the full breakdown, see our Arizona 1031 exchange rules guide.
What an Arizona 1031 Exchange Costs
Our fee is a flat $1,000 for a standard delayed exchange. You pay $750 at your sale closing and $250 at your purchase closing. There are no upfront fees and no percentage of your proceeds. Reverse and improvement exchanges take more work, so we quote those separately. Because we are attorney-owned, the fee covers your exchange documents and coordination with your title company, lender, and tax advisor.
Commercial and Investment Property We Exchange in Arizona
We act as qualified intermediary across Arizona investment real estate: apartments and multifamily, retail and shopping centers, office and medical office, industrial and warehouse, self-storage, single-tenant net-lease (NNN), mixed-use, raw land held for investment, and one-to-four-unit rentals. If you hold the property for investment or business use, it generally qualifies. Primary homes and properties you bought to flip generally do not.
How to Start Your Arizona 1031 Exchange
Call us at (888) 508-1901 before your sale closes. Timing is the one thing we cannot fix after the fact, so the exchange has to be set up first. We prepare your exchange agreement and work with your closing team so the proceeds come straight to your segregated, FDIC-insured exchange account. From your sale closing, you have 45 days to identify replacement property and 180 days to close on it. We track both dates with you, release funds only for qualified replacement property, and handle the Arizona reporting.
Why Investors Choose WealthBuilder 1031
WealthBuilder 1031 is an attorney-owned qualified intermediary serving investors across Arizona and nationwide. We hold your funds in segregated, FDIC-insured accounts, use dual authorization and strong security on every transaction, and charge one flat fee with no surprises. You work with a team that handles deferred, reverse, improvement, and simultaneous exchanges, and that coordinates directly with your title company, CPA, and attorney.
A Note on Risk
A 1031 exchange defers tax. It does not erase it, and the rules are strict. The 45-day and 180-day deadlines cannot be extended, and a missed deadline usually makes the sale fully taxable. To defer the entire gain, you need to reinvest all of your net proceeds and replace any debt that was paid off, either with new financing or with cash you add. Any shortfall, called boot, is taxable. Arizona's withholding and annual reporting add filing steps even when the exchange itself works. WealthBuilder 1031 serves only as your qualified intermediary. We do not give tax, legal, or investment advice, and we do not sell investments or securities. Please confirm your situation with your attorney and tax advisor.
1031 Exchange Activity Across Arizona
Investors exchange across Arizona's fast-growing markets, from Phoenix, Scottsdale, Mesa, and Tempe to Tucson and beyond. Replacement property commonly includes multifamily, retail, industrial, and net-lease assets, along with Delaware Statutory Trust (DST) interests for a hands-off option.
Arizona's lower flat tax and growth draw investors from higher-tax states, and many use a 1031 to move equity into Arizona without triggering tax on the property they are leaving. Arizona adds no withholding and no claw-back, so reinvesting into or out of the state stays straightforward; the state where you sell sets the rules at that closing, and we coordinate them.
Frequently Asked Questions About 1031 Exchanges in Arizona
How much does a 1031 exchange cost in Arizona?
A flat $1,000 for a standard delayed exchange, split $750 at your sale closing and $250 at your purchase closing. No upfront fees and no percentage of your proceeds. Reverse and improvement exchanges are quoted separately.
Does Arizona tax a 1031 exchange?
In a properly structured exchange, Arizona defers the gain the same way the IRS does. Arizona taxes capital gains as ordinary income at a flat 2.5%, but a valid 1031 defers that gain. There is no state withholding at closing and no claw-back reporting.
Can I exchange an Arizona property for one in another state?
Yes. You can reinvest anywhere in the United States. Arizona does not impose a claw-back, so once your exchange defers the gain there is no annual Arizona reporting tied to the out-of-state property. The state where your replacement property sits will have its own rules, and we help coordinate them with your CPA.
Do I need a qualified intermediary for a 1031 exchange in Arizona?
Yes. The IRS does not allow you or your agent to take possession of the sale proceeds. A qualified intermediary like WealthBuilder 1031 receives the funds, holds them in a segregated account, and releases them only to buy your replacement property.
How long do I have to complete a 1031 exchange in Arizona?
You have 45 days from your sale closing to identify replacement property, and 180 days to close on it. These federal deadlines do not extend, so we track both with you from day one.
What property qualifies for a 1031 exchange in Arizona?
Most real estate held for investment or business use qualifies, including rentals, multifamily, commercial buildings, and land. Primary residences and property held mainly to flip generally do not.
1031 Exchange Services Across Arizona
WealthBuilder 1031 serves real estate investors in communities throughout Arizona. Find your city below.
- Avondale, Arizona
- Chandler, Arizona
- Coolidge, Arizona
- Douglas, Arizona
- Flagstaff, Arizona
- Glendale, Arizona
- Holbrook, Arizona
- Kingman, Arizona
- Mesa, Arizona
- Phoenix, Arizona
- Prescott Valley, Arizona
- Prescott, Arizona
- Scottsdale, Arizona
- Sells, Arizona
- Tempe, Arizona
- Thatcher, Arizona
- Tsaile, Arizona
- Tucson, Arizona
- Yuma, Arizona
Do not see your city? We serve investors statewide. Call (888) 508-1901 to start your Arizona 1031 exchange, or learn the details in our Arizona 1031 exchange rules guide.

