For most real estate investors, the arc of a portfolio follows a familiar trajectory. You begin with a single property — a duplex, a small commercial unit, a residential rental — and you manage it yourself. You field the calls about the broken boiler. You negotiate the lease renewals. You handle the eviction that took nine months and cost more than a year of rent. Over time, if the strategy works, you accumulate more properties. And with more properties comes more management, more exposure, more complexity, and eventually, an inescapable question: is this still wealth-building, or has it become a second job?
The Delaware Statutory Trust — commonly abbreviated as a DST — exists to answer that question. It is a legal structure that allows individual investors to hold a fractional beneficial interest in institutional-grade real estate: Class A multifamily communities, net-lease logistics facilities, medical office portfolios, student housing complexes managed by institutional operators. The investor owns a share of the asset. A professional management company operates it. The investor receives monthly income distributions and has no day-to-day responsibilities whatsoever.
Critically, DST interests qualify as replacement property in a 1031 exchange. An investor who has spent twenty years managing their own portfolio can sell it, exchange into a DST, and step from active landlord to passive beneficiary — deferring every dollar of capital gains and depreciation recapture in the process.
Toilets, Tenants, and the Cost of Doing It Yourself
Active real estate investment has produced genuine wealth for generations of investors. The direct control, the leverage, the tax advantages — the case for owning and operating your own properties is well established and largely sound. But it carries costs that compound over time in ways that are rarely discussed at the point of acquisition.
The first cost is time. Managing a property portfolio is not a passive activity. Even with a property manager in place, the investor retains responsibility for major decisions: capital expenditure approvals, lease terms for significant tenants, refinancing decisions, insurance coverage, disputes with the management company itself. For investors who have built portfolios of three, five, or ten properties, this can represent a meaningful and ongoing time commitment that does not diminish with age.
The second cost is concentration. Most self-managed portfolios are geographically concentrated — in the market where the investor lives or works, where they have relationships, where they can drive to the property when something goes wrong. This concentration introduces risks that are easy to overlook when the market is performing well and become sharply visible when it is not. A single market downturn, a single regulatory change, or a single large tenant vacancy can affect the entire portfolio simultaneously.
The third cost is transition. At some point — retirement, health, a desire to simplify — many active investors want out. But selling means recognising gain. For long-tenured investors with substantial depreciation accumulated and significant appreciation realised, the tax cost of a straightforward exit can consume a third or more of the gross proceeds. The portfolio that took decades to build cannot be liquidated cleanly.
"The investor who built their wealth through active management often finds that the same approach that created the portfolio is now preventing them from enjoying it."
The Delaware Statutory Trust: Structure and Mechanics
A Delaware Statutory Trust is a legally separate entity formed under Delaware law that holds title to one or more real estate assets. The trust is sponsored by a real estate company — typically a firm with institutional-scale acquisition and management capabilities — which sources the property, negotiates the purchase, arranges financing, and manages the asset on an ongoing basis. Investors acquire fractional beneficial interests in the trust, making them passive owners of a pro-rata share of the underlying real estate.
The IRS issued Revenue Ruling 2004-86, which confirmed that beneficial interests in a DST constitute real property interests eligible for 1031 exchange treatment. This ruling is the legal foundation for the use of DSTs as 1031 replacement properties, and it has remained operative and unchallenged since its issuance.
IRS Revenue Ruling 2004-86 confirmed that a beneficial interest in a Delaware Statutory Trust constitutes an interest in real property for purposes of Section 1031. Provided the DST structure complies with the ruling's requirements — including restrictions on investor control and the trust's authority to take on new debt — investors may exchange directly into DST interests and fully defer capital gains and depreciation recapture.
What Investors Actually Own
A DST beneficial interest is not a share of stock, not a partnership interest, and not a REIT unit. It is a fractional ownership interest in a specific real property — the same kind of interest that qualifies for 1031 exchange treatment when transferred through a traditional property-to-property exchange.
This distinction matters. When an investor holds a DST interest, they are a fractional owner of the underlying real estate. Income generated by the property — net rents after operating expenses, management fees, and debt service — flows through to investors as monthly distributions. Depreciation from the property passes through proportionally, providing investors with non-cash deductions that shelter a portion of the income received. At the end of the DST's hold period — typically five to ten years — the property is sold, proceeds are distributed, and investors may complete another 1031 exchange into a new replacement property, or choose to pay the taxes and exit.
From Landlord to Beneficiary
| Active Ownership | DST Ownership | |
|---|---|---|
| Day-to-Day Management | Investor responsible — directly or through PM | Institutional operator. No investor involvement required. |
| Tenant Relations | Investor or PM handles leasing, renewals, disputes | Managed entirely by the DST sponsor and asset manager. |
| Capital Expenditures | Investor approves and funds major repairs | Funded from reserves established at acquisition. No investor capital calls. |
| Geographic Risk | Concentrated in investor's operating market | Diversified across asset types, geographies, and tenants. |
| Income Distribution | Variable — dependent on occupancy and expenses | Monthly distributions, typically contractually scheduled. |
| Liquidity | Illiquid — sale triggers full tax event | Illiquid — secondary market limited. Exchange or hold to disposition. |
| 1031 Eligibility | Yes | Yes — confirmed by IRS Rev. Rul. 2004-86. |
Fractional Ownership and the Boot Gap
One of the most practical — and frequently underappreciated — advantages of DST interests is their utility in resolving the boot problem that arises in nearly every 1031 exchange.
In a standard exchange, an investor must reinvest the full net proceeds from the relinquished property into qualifying replacement property to defer 100% of the gain. Any proceeds not reinvested — whether received as cash, retained equity, or debt relief — constitute boot and are taxable in the year of the exchange. In practice, it is almost impossible to match the exact equity from a property sale to the exact equity required by a single replacement property acquisition. The numbers rarely align with precision.
DST interests, which can be acquired in increments as small as $25,000 to $100,000 depending on the offering, provide a mechanism to deploy the remaining equity with precision. An investor who sells a relinquished property for $1,800,000 and identifies a replacement property requiring $1,650,000 in equity does not need to leave $150,000 exposed to tax. They can deploy that remaining capital into a DST interest, satisfy the full reinvestment requirement, and defer the tax on the entire gain.
The DST does not need to be the primary replacement property. It functions as a precision instrument for closing the equity gap — deploying whatever amount remains after the primary acquisition into a qualifying real property interest, without requiring the investor to find or close on a second full property in the remaining exchange window.
Why Investors Choose DSTs
The sponsor handles all property operations. The investor receives distributions and annual tax documents. No calls, no decisions, no site visits required.
DST offerings typically involve Class A or institutional-grade assets — properties that individual investors could not acquire independently at any price.
Minimum investments typically range from $25,000 to $100,000, enabling precise equity deployment and portfolio diversification across multiple DST offerings.
Depreciation from the underlying asset flows through to investors proportionally, sheltering a portion of the monthly income from current taxation.
DST interests qualify as like-kind replacement property, enabling complete deferral of both capital gains tax and depreciation recapture.
When the DST disposes of its asset, investors may complete another 1031 exchange into a new replacement property through a licensed Qualified Intermediary — continuing the tax deferral chain indefinitely.
What Investors Must Understand Before Proceeding
The DST structure solves several problems that active investors encounter. It does not solve all of them, and it introduces constraints that are important to understand before committing exchange proceeds to a DST interest.
The Seven Deadly Sins of DST Compliance
Revenue Ruling 2004-86 imposes seven restrictions on DST structures that are necessary to maintain their 1031 eligibility. These restrictions — sometimes called the "Seven Deadly Sins" by practitioners — limit what a DST trustee may do during the trust's life:
- The trust may not accept new capital contributions after the initial offering closes.
- The trust may not renegotiate existing loans or enter into new financing arrangements, except in the case of a loan default.
- The trust may not reinvest proceeds from the sale of property into new assets.
- The trust may not retain cash between distribution periods, other than in reasonable reserves.
- The trust may not enter into new leases or renegotiate existing leases — except for certain short-term, net-lease structures with high credit tenants.
- The trustee may not make capital expenditures beyond ordinary maintenance, except in the case of emergency repairs or legally mandated improvements.
- The trustee may not make decisions that are the responsibility of investors under the trust agreement.
These restrictions exist to preserve the trust's tax treatment. They also mean that DST investments are structurally inflexible once closed. An investor who anticipates needing to reposition, refinance, or significantly alter the asset should not use a DST structure to hold it.
Illiquidity
DST interests are not publicly traded. There is no established secondary market for the sale of a DST beneficial interest, and while some sponsors offer limited secondary liquidity mechanisms, these are not guaranteed and should not be relied upon in financial planning. Investors should anticipate holding their DST interest until the trust disposes of its underlying property — a period that typically ranges from five to ten years.
DST interests are classified as securities under federal law and may only be offered to accredited investors. They are not appropriate for investors who may need liquidity from this capital within the expected hold period, investors who are not comfortable with the risks inherent in real estate ownership, or investors who do not meet the applicable accreditation thresholds. Always review the offering documents — including the Private Placement Memorandum — with qualified legal and financial advisors before investing.
Sponsor Dependence
In an active portfolio, the investor's own judgment and operational capacity determines the quality of the outcome. In a DST, that judgment is delegated entirely to the sponsor. The quality of the sponsor — their underwriting standards, their asset management capability, their track record through market cycles, their financial strength — directly determines the return the investor receives. Evaluating sponsors is a distinct skill set, and investors who are accustomed to evaluating assets rather than operators should seek guidance from advisors who specialise in DST due diligence.
Projected Returns Are Not Guaranteed
DST offering documents present projected cash-on-cash returns, typically in the range of four to six percent annually, based on assumptions about occupancy, rental growth, and operating expenses. These projections are not guaranteed. Market conditions, vacancy rates, operating cost inflation, and interest rate movements at the time of disposition can all materially affect actual returns. An investor who selects a DST based on its projected yield without scrutinising the underlying assumptions does so at their own risk.
The Investor for Whom a DST Makes Sense
The DST is not the right vehicle for every 1031 investor. It is most appropriate for investors who are at or approaching a transition point — seeking to reduce the operational burden of their portfolio, diversify out of concentrated positions, access institutional asset quality, or establish a path to an estate that can be transferred cleanly to heirs.
Specifically, DSTs tend to serve investors who:
- Are approaching or have reached retirement and wish to eliminate the time and stress of active property management without triggering a taxable sale
- Have accumulated a portfolio of smaller assets and wish to consolidate into larger, professionally managed real estate without losing their deferred gain
- Are facing a boot gap in an existing 1031 exchange and need a qualifying replacement property for a precise equity amount
- Wish to diversify a portfolio that is heavily concentrated in a single asset type, geography, or tenant
- Are estate planning and wish to hold real estate in a form that is administratively simpler for heirs to manage or continue exchanging
For these investors, the DST represents something that active real estate has rarely offered: genuine passivity, institutional-grade assets, and a fully compliant path through the 1031 exchange — without touching the tax that has accumulated over a lifetime of building.
Disclaimer — This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, financial, or investment advice. DST interests are securities and may only be offered to accredited investors. Past performance of DST offerings is not indicative of future results. Always review the full offering documents, including the Private Placement Memorandum, with qualified legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decision. 1031 exchange requirements are subject to IRS regulations and individual circumstances may vary.