Realized Gain vs. Recognized Gain
Realized gain and recognized gain are related but distinct tax concepts, and the difference between them is the foundation of every tax-deferral strategy in real estate. Realized gain is the total economic gain on a transaction, the amount realized (typically the sale price net of selling costs) minus the property's adjusted basis. It measures the full profit the disposition produced. Recognized gain is the portion of that realized gain that is actually subject to tax in the current year. In an ordinary taxable sale, the two are equal: all realized gain is recognized and taxed. The power of provisions like Section 1031 (like-kind exchanges), Section 721 (contributions to a partnership or UPREIT), and Section 1400Z-2 (Opportunity Zones) is that they allow a taxpayer to realize a gain without recognizing it, deferring the tax. In a fully structured 1031 exchange, for instance, the investor realizes the full gain on the relinquished property but recognizes none of it currently, because the gain is rolled into the replacement property's basis and stays deferred. If boot is received, that portion of the realized gain becomes recognized (taxable) up to the amount of boot, while the rest remains deferred. The distinction also explains why a step-up in basis at death is so valuable: it permanently eliminates the deferred but unrecognized gain, so it is never recognized at all. Understanding which gains are merely realized versus actually recognized is central to real estate tax planning and should be modeled with a tax advisor.