If you are a non-U.S. person selling real estate in the United States — or a buyer purchasing from one — the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act (FIRPTA) is probably going to affect your closing. Here is what it is, how it works, and what your title company should be doing about it.
The Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act is a 1980 federal tax law designed to ensure that foreign persons pay U.S. income tax on gains from selling U.S. real property. Because the IRS cannot easily collect tax from someone outside the country after a sale closes, FIRPTA puts the collection obligation on the buyer, in the form of withholding at closing.
When a foreign person sells U.S. real estate, the buyer is required to withhold 15% of the gross sales price and remit it to the IRS within 20 days of closing. This is not a tax on the seller's profit — it is a withholding against the gross sales price, regardless of whether the seller had a gain or a loss.
A few important clarifications:
Several exemptions can reduce or eliminate FIRPTA withholding:
If the sales price is $300,000 or less and the buyer intends to use the property as a primary or secondary residence for at least 50% of the days it is in use in each of the two years following closing, no withholding is required. The buyer makes this certification in writing.
If the property is between $300,000 and $1,000,000 and the buyer makes the residence-use certification, the rate drops from 15% to 10%.
If the seller is actually a U.S. person (citizen, green-card holder, or qualifying resident alien), the seller can provide an affidavit of non-foreign status and no withholding is required. Title companies routinely request this certification from every seller as a matter of course.
A foreign seller can apply to the IRS for a withholding certificate that reduces or eliminates withholding based on the actual tax liability the sale will generate. This is the most impactful exemption for sellers who will have little or no gain. The application takes 90 days on average to process, so it must be started well before closing. The title company will typically hold the withholding in escrow until the IRS issues the certificate.
On any sale where the seller might be a foreign person, a responsible title company will:
FIRPTA is where unfamiliar title companies make the most expensive mistakes. The most common:
Cross-border closings are a daily part of our work in the Texas Hill Country. Every file in our system is checked for FIRPTA exposure at open. Every seller is asked to certify status in writing. Every buyer gets a clear explanation of what withholding means. If a withholding certificate is in play, we coordinate with the seller's CPA directly to make sure the Form 8288-B application is filed in time.
For a cross-border closing you are considering, we recommend a brief scoping call before you go under contract. Ten minutes on the phone with our cross-border team can flag compliance issues that are much easier to solve before the contract is signed than at closing.
This article is general information, not tax or legal advice. FIRPTA rules have exceptions and nuances beyond the scope of this summary. Foreign sellers with significant tax exposure should consult with a qualified tax professional or attorney.
Our bilingual escrow officers are happy to walk you through anything covered here as it applies to your specific situation.
Contact us (210) 555-1656