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721 Exchange

OP Units Explained: How Operating Partnership Units Work

April 18, 2025 11 min read Jerry Baker
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Executive Summary

A complete memo on operating-partnership (OP) units: what they are, how you receive them in a 721 exchange, how distributions work, converting to REIT shares, redemption, voting rights, valuation, and tax treatment.

When investors learn about the 721 exchange, the part that stays fuzzy is what they end up holding: operating-partnership units, or "OP units." They are neither real estate nor quite REIT stock, and that in-between nature is exactly what makes the UPREIT work — and what trips people up. This memo demystifies OP units: where they come from, how they pay you, how and when you can turn them into cash or shares, and how they're taxed along the way.

What OP units are

A REIT structured as an "UPREIT" doesn't own its properties directly; it owns them through an operating partnership, of which the REIT is the general partner. OP units are limited-partnership interests in that operating partnership. When you complete a 721 exchange, you contribute your property (or DST interest) to the operating partnership and receive OP units in return.

The defining feature of OP units is that they are designed to be economically equivalent to the REIT's common shares. A unit and a share generally carry the same value and the same distribution per period; the difference is legal form (a partnership interest versus a share of stock) and the tax consequences that flow from it. Think of an OP unit as a share of the REIT in a partnership wrapper — a wrapper that exists precisely to allow your contribution to be tax-deferred.

How you receive them

You receive OP units by contributing appreciated property to the operating partnership under Section 721, which generally makes the contribution tax-free. The number of units you get is set by a conversion ratio — typically your property's agreed value divided by the value of one unit (which tracks one REIT share). If your contributed interest is worth, say, the equivalent of 10,000 units at the current unit value, that's what you receive.

From that moment, your economic exposure shifts from a single property to the whole REIT portfolio behind the operating partnership. You've traded a concentrated, directly held asset for a diversified, indirect one — the core trade of the UPREIT, examined in our downsides memo.

How distributions work

OP units pay distributions that mirror the REIT's dividend, generally on the same schedule and per-unit amount as a REIT share. This is the income you live on while holding the units, and for many 721 investors it's the whole point — passive cash flow from a diversified portfolio without managing anything.

Because you're a limited partner rather than a shareholder, these distributions come to you through the partnership and are reported on a Schedule K-1 rather than the 1099-DIV a REIT shareholder receives. The economics are designed to match a shareholder's, but the tax reporting runs through partnership rules, which is one reason OP unitholders should keep a tax advisor in the loop.

OP units vs. REIT shares

Understanding how OP units compare to REIT shares matters, since they're related but distinct. OP units are interests in the operating partnership (which owns the real estate), while REIT shares are ownership of the REIT itself (which controls the operating partnership). Economically they're similar — both reflect ownership in the REIT's portfolio, and OP units are typically convertible into REIT shares (often one-for-one) — so a unit and a share generally represent comparable economic value.

The key differences are tax treatment and liquidity. On tax: holding OP units continues the tax deferral (the gain stays deferred), while converting OP units to REIT shares is generally a taxable event (triggering the deferred gain). So OP units are the tax-deferred holding, and REIT shares are the post-conversion (taxable) holding. On liquidity: REIT shares of a public REIT are liquid and tradable on the market, while OP units are less liquid — you typically must convert them to shares to access the market, triggering the tax.

The relationship, then, is that OP units are the tax-deferred, partnership-level interest you receive in the 721 exchange, and REIT shares are the liquid, corporate-level interest you can convert into (triggering the tax). You hold units for deferral and income, and convert to shares for liquidity, accepting the tax. Understanding the comparison clarifies the central choice in managing your post-721 ownership: hold units for deferral and income, or convert to shares for liquidity.

Converting OP units to REIT shares

OP units aren't permanent. After an initial holding period — often around a year, set by the partnership agreement — you generally gain the right to tender your units, at which point the REIT typically elects to deliver REIT shares (commonly one-for-one) or, at its option, cash. Converting to shares is what gives a 721 investor a path to the liquidity of the REIT's stock, especially when the REIT is publicly traded.

The crucial caveat: conversion is a taxable event. Tendering your OP units recognizes the deferred capital gain (and depreciation recapture) on the portion converted. The deferral you preserved by taking units in the first place ends when you turn them into shares. That's why many investors convert gradually, spreading the tax over several years, rather than all at once.

Redeeming for cash

Instead of (or in addition to) converting to shares, units can often be redeemed for cash. For a publicly traded REIT this is straightforward; for a non-traded REIT, redemption runs through a program with caps, possible queues, and the sponsor's discretion to limit or suspend redemptions in stressed conditions. Either way, like conversion, redeeming for cash is a taxable disposition that triggers the deferred gain. The practical lesson is that there's no tax-free way to get your money out of OP units short of holding them until death — which is exactly why estate planning figures so heavily in 721 strategy.

Voting and other rights

OP unitholders are limited partners, not shareholders, so they generally do not have the voting rights REIT shareholders enjoy on matters like electing the board. The REIT, as general partner, controls the operating partnership. Partnership agreements often grant unitholders certain protective rights — for example, limits on actions that would unfairly trigger their built-in gain — but you should not expect a meaningful voice in governance. In practical terms, taking OP units means accepting passive, non-voting participation in the REIT's fortunes; if governance influence matters to you, this is part of what you give up.

How OP units are valued

Because OP units track REIT shares, their value moves with the share value. For a publicly traded REIT, that's a live, transparent market price. For a non-traded REIT, value is set by periodic net asset value (NAV) appraisals rather than a market, which means the stated value can lag real conditions and that redemptions are typically based on that appraised figure. Understanding which kind of REIT issued your units tells you how reliable — and how current — your unit value really is, and how genuine the "liquidity" you've been promised will be.

Tax treatment over the holding period

While you hold OP units, your deferred gain stays deferred; it isn't recognized simply by holding. You report your share of partnership income on a K-1, and cash distributions are generally not taxable to the extent of your basis in the units (though they reduce that basis). The deferred built-in gain is recognized later — on conversion or redemption, as described, or potentially if the operating partnership sells the contributed property in a way that passes the gain through to you.

And the most favorable outcome of all comes from not selling: hold the units until death, and your heirs may receive a stepped-up basis that can eliminate the deferred gain entirely. That estate dimension is significant enough to warrant its own treatment, which we give in estate planning with a 721 exchange.

OP units and estate planning

OP units offer significant estate-planning advantages, making them valuable for wealth transfer. The step-up in basis at death applies to OP units — if you hold the units until death, your heirs generally receive a stepped-up basis (reset to fair market value at your death), which can erase the deferred gain embedded in the units. So the gain you deferred, plus further appreciation, can pass to heirs free of the income tax that converting or selling would have triggered. The step-up makes OP units a powerful estate-planning holding.

The divisibility of OP units is another estate advantage. Unlike a single property, which is hard to divide among multiple heirs, OP units are easily divisible — you can leave specific numbers of units to each heir, cleanly dividing your real estate wealth without forcing a sale or creating shared-property complications. OP units therefore simplify estate division among multiple heirs, a practical benefit for estate planning.

Together, the step-up (erasing the gain) and the divisibility (easing the division) make OP units exceptionally well-suited to estate planning. An owner can hold the units for life — earning distributions and deferring the gain — and pass them to heirs, with the step-up erasing the gain and the units dividing cleanly. This parallels the benefits of holding 1031 property until death, and shows why OP units are especially attractive for owners focused on transferring real estate wealth to heirs tax-efficiently.

How Baker 1031 helps with OP units

Baker 1031 Investments helps property owners understand OP units — what you'd receive in a 721 exchange, how they compare to REIT shares, the distributions they pay, how conversion works and its tax, and their estate-planning role — so you understand the nature of your post-721 ownership before proceeding. We help you evaluate whether holding OP units, the tax-deferred form of REIT ownership, fits your goals.

OP units, REIT shares, and related securities are offered through the broker-dealer, Aurora Securities, Inc. (member FINRA / SIPC), and any recommendation follows a suitability review — OP units are securities, available to suitable investors after that review. We coordinate with your CPA on the tax aspects (the deferral, distributions' taxation, conversion's tax, and the step-up) and your estate attorney on the estate-planning role. Our role is to help you understand OP units fully — the income, the deferral, the conversion flexibility, and the estate benefits — so that if you do a 721 exchange, you know exactly what you'll hold and how to manage it.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What are OP units in a 721 exchange?

Operating-partnership units — limited-partnership interests in a REIT's operating partnership, received when you contribute property in a 721 exchange. They're economically equivalent to REIT shares and pay matching distributions.

How do OP units pay income?

They pay distributions that mirror the REIT's dividend, generally on the same schedule and per-unit amount as a REIT share. As a partner, you report this on a Schedule K-1.

Can I convert OP units to REIT shares?

Usually yes, after a holding period. The REIT typically delivers shares (often one-for-one) or cash, but conversion is a taxable event that recognizes the deferred gain.

Do OP unitholders get to vote like REIT shareholders?

Generally no. OP unitholders are limited partners, not shareholders, so they typically lack REIT shareholders' voting rights, though partnership agreements often include limited protective rights.

Are OP units taxed while I hold them?

The deferred gain stays deferred while you hold; you report partnership income on a K-1, and distributions are generally not taxable up to your basis. Tax is triggered on conversion, redemption, or certain partnership sales.

How do I get OP units?

By contributing property to the REIT's operating partnership in a 721 exchange — the partnership issues you OP units equal in value to your contributed property, tax-deferred under Section 721. The number of units equals your property's agreed value divided by the unit value, so e.g. a $4,000,000 property at $40/unit yields 100,000 units. You receive the units without recognizing the gain, becoming a limited partner.

How do OP units differ from REIT shares?

OP units are interests in the operating partnership (which owns the real estate); REIT shares are ownership of the REIT (which controls the partnership). They're economically similar and typically convertible, but differ in tax and liquidity: holding units defers the gain, while converting to shares triggers it; and REIT shares are liquid and tradable, while units are less liquid. Units are the tax-deferred holding; shares are the liquid form you convert into.

Is converting OP units to shares taxable?

Yes, generally — converting OP units to REIT shares (or cash) is a taxable event that triggers the deferred gain on the converted units. You can convert gradually to spread the tax over time, or hold the units until death, when the step-up can erase the gain.

Do OP units get a step-up in basis at death?

Yes — the step-up in basis at death applies to OP units. If you hold the units until death, your heirs generally receive a stepped-up basis reset to fair market value, which can erase the deferred gain embedded in the units, making OP units a powerful estate-planning holding.

Are OP units divisible among heirs?

Yes — OP units are easily divisible, unlike a single property. You can leave specific numbers of units to each heir, cleanly dividing your real estate wealth without forcing a sale. Combined with the step-up, the divisibility makes OP units well-suited to transferring real estate wealth to multiple heirs.

Are OP units liquid?

Less liquid than REIT shares directly. OP units themselves aren't typically tradable; to access market liquidity you generally convert them to REIT shares (liquid and tradable for public REITs), but converting triggers the deferred gain. OP units offer a path to liquidity via conversion, but aren't directly liquid, and accessing it has a tax cost.

Are OP units securities?

Yes — OP units are securities, so receiving and holding them involves securities offered through a broker-dealer to suitable investors after a suitability review. Securities regulation applies, and a financial professional assesses whether the 721 exchange and resulting OP units fit your circumstances.

How are OP unit distributions taxed?

The distributions are taxed per partnership and REIT tax rules, which your CPA addresses — they may include ordinary income and return of capital with different tax treatment, and you may receive a Schedule K-1. The taxation of the distributions is separate from the deferred gain on your contributed property, which is triggered on conversion.

What happens to my OP units if I do nothing?

If you hold them without converting, you continue earning distributions with the deferred gain remaining deferred, and you can hold indefinitely. If you hold until death, your heirs receive the units with a stepped-up basis, potentially erasing the gain. Doing nothing means continued income and deferral toward the step-up — a valid long-term strategy.

Glossary

Key Terms

Operating Partnership
The partnership through which an UPREIT owns its properties; the REIT is the general partner.
OP Units
Limited-partnership units in the operating partnership, economically equivalent to REIT shares.
Conversion Ratio
The formula setting how many OP units you receive for contributed property, and how units convert to shares.
Net Asset Value (NAV)
The appraisal-based per-unit value used by non-traded REITs in place of a market price.
Schedule K-1
The tax form reporting a partner's share of partnership income, issued to OP unitholders.
Limited Partner
Your role as an OP unit holder in the operating partnership.
REIT Shares
The corporate, tradable ownership of the REIT, convertible from OP units.
Conversion
Exchanging OP units for REIT shares, generally a taxable event.
Distributions
Income paid on OP units, comparable to REIT dividends.
Section 721
The code section under which you receive OP units tax-deferred.
Carryover Basis
The property's basis carried into the OP units, holding the deferred gain.
Step-Up in Basis
The death-time reset erasing the deferred gain on OP units.
Divisibility
The ease of dividing OP units among heirs.
Unit Value
The per-unit value (tied to the REIT's share price) setting units received.
Holding Period
The time before OP units can typically convert to shares.
Return of Capital
A distribution component that may be non-taxable, reducing basis.
Liquidity
Accessed by converting units to tradable shares (taxable).
UPREIT
The umbrella partnership REIT whose operating partnership issues OP units.
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, and helping investors understand the structure before deciding whether it suits their goals.

Sources & References
  1. Cornell Legal Information Institute. 26 U.S. Code § 721 — Nonrecognition of gain or loss on contribution to a partnership
  2. Cornell Legal Information Institute. 26 U.S. Code § 731 — Extent of recognition of gain or loss on distribution
  3. Cornell Legal Information Institute. 26 U.S. Code § 741 — Recognition and character of gain or loss on sale or exchange of a partnership interest
  4. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Investor.gov — Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)

Educational content, not tax, legal, or investment advice. DST and securities interests are offered to accredited investors through Aurora Securities, Inc. (member FINRA/SIPC) following a suitability review. Subject to Aurora Securities principal approval before publication.