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1031 Exchange & DSTs · New York

1031 Exchanges & Delaware Statutory Trusts in New York

Defer New York's 10.9% tax on your gain — and the federal bill too.

By · Updated 2026-06-18
10.9%
New York top rate on gains
~34.7% (higher for NYC residents)
Combined w/ federal + NIIT
3
Baker realized deals on NY property
15
DST sponsors based in NY

New York taxes capital gains as ordinary income at rates up to 10.9% — and New York City residents add a local tax on top — so selling appreciated real estate can cost a third or more of the gain when stacked with federal tax. A 1031 exchange into a Delaware Statutory Trust lets New York investors defer the combined bill and exchange active rentals for passive institutional real estate.

The New York tax math


Here's the tax stack on a long-held rental sold for a $1.5M gain (excludes depreciation recapture, taxed separately at up to 25%):

20%
Federal long-term
3.8%
Net investment income tax
10.9%
New York state
~34.7% (higher for NYC residents)
Combined effective
On a $1.5M gainTax
Federal long-term capital gains (20%)$300,000
Net investment income tax (3.8%)$57,000
New York income tax (10.9%)$163,500
Total if you simply sell$520,500
Tax if you 1031 into a DST$0 deferred
Why it matters

In New York's top bracket, roughly the combined rate above goes to tax if you sell outright — versus $0 now with a qualifying 1031 exchange. Run your New York numbers →

New York 1031 rules


Rules summarized as of 2026 — verify with your tax advisor.

01

Conforms to federal §1031

New York conforms to IRC §1031, so a qualifying exchange defers New York tax as well as federal tax. Nonresidents selling NY property typically must remit estimated tax with Form IT-2663 at closing unless the gain is deferred in a 1031 exchange.

02

Withholding at sale

Nonresidents generally prepay estimated tax at closing via Form IT-2663 unless a 1031 exemption applies.

03

How gains are taxed

Taxed as ordinary income (no preferential rate); NYC residents add city tax (~3.876%).

New York market snapshot


Illustrative — wire to a market-data feed; refreshed quarterly.

~$470K (statewide)
Median value
4.5–6.0% multifamily
Cap rates
High tax burden drives strong demand for tax-deferred passive exits
Demand signal

Baker 1031 in New York


Realized (acquired, held, sold) programs on New York assets. Joined from full-cycle-deals.csv; sponsor-reported, net-to-investor, not independently verified; past performance ≠ future results.

ProgramSponsorAvg annualEquity ×Hold
Austell Place Equities LLC — Long Island CityTime Equities25.18%12.51x14.33 yr
124 Hudson Street TIC — New YorkTime Equities8.68%2.42x12.05 yr
Rite Aid — CiceroAEI5.20%1.25x19.22 yr

See every New York deal in the Data Center →

Current offerings for New York investors

OfferingSponsorTypeStatus
LSC-Latham NY, DSTLivingston Street CapitalSenior LivingLimited Availability

DST sponsors based in New York

Apollo Global Management · New YorkBlackstone · New YorkBlue Owl · New YorkBluerock · New YorkBrookfield · New YorkCantor Fitzgerald · New YorkCantor Silverstein · New YorkFortress Investment Group · New YorkGoldman Sachs · New YorkJ.P. Morgan · New YorkKeystone National Properties · New YorkKKR · New York+ 3 more

Learn more


New York FAQ


What is the capital gains tax rate in New York?

New York taxes capital gains as ordinary income, up to a 10.9% top rate, with no preferential long-term rate. New York City residents add a local income tax (about 3.876%). Combined with the federal 23.8%, a high-bracket New Yorker can face roughly 35% or more on a real estate gain.

Does New York recognize 1031 exchanges?

Yes. New York conforms to IRC §1031, so a properly structured exchange defers New York tax as well as federal tax.

What is Form IT-2663?

Form IT-2663 is New York's nonresident real property estimated income tax form. Nonresidents selling New York property generally must pay estimated tax at closing — unless the gain is deferred through a qualifying 1031 exchange.

Disclosures

This page is educational and is not investment, tax, or legal advice, or an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy any security. State tax and 1031 rules summarized here are general, current as of 2026, and not tax advice — verify with your CPA and attorney. For accredited investors only. Representatives may transact business only in states where registered or exempt. Securities offered through Aurora Securities, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC; Baker 1031 Investments, LLC is independent of Aurora. Performance shown is sponsor-reported, realized programs only, net of fees, not independently verified, and not indicative of future results.

New York metros & nearby states