TIC or LLC: Which is a Better Vehicle for Real Estate Investing?
Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010Since we’re in a buyer’s real estate market, I got to thinking about all the dialogue that takes place concerning the best vehicles for real estate investing, and it brought back a memory. You may or may not know that David, Ryan, and I previously worked at a former OSJ branch of Omni Brokerage, called JRW Investments. Well during my tenure there, while attending a trade show with the Registered Reps, I had the opportunity to hear “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” author Robert Kiyosaki speak. And amid all of the helpful insight and motivation, he spewed forth the following oversimplification with positivity and absolution, which I was only subsequently able to attribute to his advisor, Garret Sutton:
a limited liability company (an LLC) is the best entity for [real estate investing] business.[1]
Why? Sutton went on in the article I had tracked down, which was posted to the internet at the time, to describe the benefits of LLC’s for owners, including “excellent liability protection, flow-through tax treatment” and the “ability to transfer real estate”. These benefits were directly contrasted to other vehicles of holding real estate, including “Tenant-in-Common“!.
Much of what he said may have been true, but it was unfortunately oversimplified, and had a regrettable effect on us as a result. Can you guess what happened at that trade show after all of those aspirant real estate investors heard Rich Son’s rant against Tenant-in-Common as a method for holding real estate? They all came flooding out of the auditorium to see JRW Investment’s booth proudly advertising TIC investments as replacement properties for 1031 exchanges! Robert Kiyosaki had turned off half of his clientele (ticket-purchasing investors) to the other half (sponsorship-purchasing vendors)!
So what of taking title to real property as a Tenant-in-Common? TIC investments have become popular since IRS revenue procedure 2002-22 blessed them as viable replacement properties for 1031 tax-deferred exchanges. So popular in fact, that an entire industry has blossomed that focuses on bringing TIC properties to investors looking for passive cash flow. Do TIC investors have to abandon the benefits of LLC’s entirely?
Fortunately the answer is “no”, investors don’t have to chose: most Lenders who finance portions of these TIC offerings actually require Sponsors to set their investors up to take title to their interests via LLC’s. These Single Purpose Entities (SPE’s) are disregarded for federal tax purposes, which means the liability protection offered by LLC’s can be utilized without fear of fumbling the exchange.
A voice from within the TIC industry, Margustin Born, Director of Investment Programs at Meridian Realty, wrote that
The use of SPE’s provides two major benefits to TIC investors. First, it insulates them from financial risks associated with financial problems of their fellow investors. Second, it limits their financial exposure to the amount of equity they have invested in the transaction.[2]
But while these benefits can be utilized even when investing in real estate as a Tenant-in-Common, a challenge regularly faces the industry. Although most TIC Sponsors have these LLC’s Formed as a part of their investment packages, many TIC properties sustain Delinquencies. During a month-long survey, Sabre uncovered that a whopping 80% of the properties in a generous sample each had at least one Delinquent investor LLC.
As it turns out, Delinquent LLC’s aren’t just problems for their individual owners, either. Delinquent LLC’s can inhibit a Sponsor’s ability to bring legal action against building occupants who violate their lease agreements. The LLC’s also lose their Authority to Do Business, cease to limit investor liability, and may bring the various loans into default.
To fully take advantage of the benefits that LLC’s bring TIC investors, Sponsors and investors must take measures to ensure that a Registered Agent remains appointed to their entity, and that all state tax and Filing requirements are met. Only then can the false dichotomy pitting TIC against LLC be resolved, allowing real estate investors to enjoy the limited liability of the one, with the tax-deferred exchange potential of the other.
1 Garret Sutton, The Best Entity for Hold Real Estate. Articles, CASHFLOW Technologies 2006, Retrieved July 18th, 2007.
2 Margustin G. Born, Making Sense of the Legal “Mumbo Jumbo” – A TIC Investors’ Guide to SPEs. TIC TALK 2nd Quarter 2007, OMNI Consulting & Research. Available online.





