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The 45-Day Window: Rates, Replacement Property & the 2026 DST Pipeline

July 9, 2026 7 min read Jerry Baker
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Executive Summary

Lower long-term rates have reopened the acquisition math for institutional real estate, but the 45- and 180-day exchange clocks are as unforgiving as ever. This month we look at where replacement-property supply is building across the DST pipeline, why pre-packaged offerings shorten the path to a compliant close, and what a narrower reinvestment window means for investors weighing a sale. [Replace this summary with your own — it sets up the sections below.]

The setup: a narrower reinvestment window. When an investor sells appreciated real estate, the IRS clock starts the same day: 45 calendar days to identify replacement property and 180 to close. In a market where quality assets move quickly, that window is the single hardest constraint in a 1031 exchange — and the reason so many exchanges fail is not tax strategy but timing. Here is what is shaping the pipeline this quarter:

(1) Supply is broadening. Sponsors have brought a wider mix of shelf-ready DST offerings to market this year — multifamily, industrial, and necessity retail — giving exchangers more pre-vetted options to identify inside the 45-day window (Fig. 1). More breadth means less pressure to force-fit a single property before the deadline.

(2) Financing is arriving pre-arranged. Because leverage on a DST is underwritten and rate-locked at the portfolio level, the investor never personally qualifies for a loan — removing the lender contingency that most often threatens a 180-day close (Fig. 2).

(3) Due diligence is already done. The inspections, title work, and lease analysis that would overwhelm a 45-day window are completed before the offering opens, so the investor is stepping into a fully assembled asset rather than starting from scratch.

The hardest part of a 1031 isn't the tax code — it's the calendar. Pre-packaged replacement property is really a way of buying back time. — Jerry Baker, Managing Principal, Baker 1031 Investments
Figure 1
Shelf-ready DST offerings available to 1031 investors, by quarter
Source: [add your data source and period]. Illustrative placeholder for layout — replace with your chart.
1031 Strategy

Where DSTs Fit in the Timeline

A Delaware Statutory Trust lets an investor own a fractional beneficial interest in institutional-grade real estate that the IRS recognizes as like-kind replacement property (Revenue Ruling 2004-86). Because the asset is already sourced, financed, and structured before the offering opens, it can serve as either a primary identification or a reliable backup to meet the exchange deadlines.

For investors weighing a sale this year, the practical question is less "which property" and more "which pipeline" — how deep, how vetted, and how quickly an offering can close. That is the lens we apply to every sponsor before presenting an offering.

Figure 2
Typical time-to-close: open-market purchase vs. shelf-ready DST
Source: [add methodology]. Illustrative placeholder — durations are representative, not drawn to scale.
Key Takeaways
  • The binding constraint in a 1031 exchange is the 45/180-day calendar, not the tax strategy.
  • A broader, pre-vetted DST pipeline reduces the risk of a forced identification at the deadline.
  • Portfolio-level, pre-arranged financing removes the lender contingency that most often breaks a close.

The bottom line. A friendlier rate backdrop helps the acquisition math, but it does not extend the clock. Investors considering a sale this year benefit most from lining up replacement options before the relinquished property closes — so the 45-day window becomes a selection exercise, not a scramble. We are happy to walk through the current pipeline whenever the timing is right for you.

JB
Gerald F. “Jerry” Baker, III
Managing Principal · Baker 1031 Investments · Registered Representative, Aurora Securities, Inc.

Jerry works directly with investors — principal to investor — sourcing and independently vetting institutional-quality DST and 1031 offerings. [Replace with the principal's approved bio.]

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