REIT (Real Estate Investment Trust)

A REIT is a tax-advantaged entity that owns income-producing real estate and distributes at least 90% of its taxable income to shareholders — available as publicly traded securities, non-traded public REITs, and private REITs.

What it means

To qualify as a REIT under IRS rules, an entity must: invest at least 75% of assets in real estate, derive at least 75% of income from rents or mortgage interest, distribute at least 90% of taxable income to shareholders, and have at least 100 shareholders with broad ownership diversification.

Public REITs trade like stocks (AVB, EQR, SPG, etc.) and offer liquidity but also stock-market volatility. Non-traded public REITs (Blackstone BREIT, Starwood SREIT) file with SEC but don't trade daily, offering less volatility but liquidity gates. Private REITs are accredited-only vehicles typical of institutional sponsorship.

REIT shares are securities, not real property — they are not like-kind for 1031 purposes.

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