Illinois Administrative Code
Title 86 - REVENUE
Part 120 - REAL ESTATE TRANSFER TAX
Section 120.20 - Legal and Technical Interpretations
Universal Citation: 86 IL Admin Code ยง 120.20
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) Taxable Transactions.
1) Transfers of title to real estate located
in Illinois are subject to the provisions of the Real Estate Transfer Tax Law
[35 ILCS 200 /Art. 31](Law).
2)
Transfers of a beneficial interest in real property located in Illinois are
subject to the provisions of the Law, including:
A) the beneficial interest in an Illinois
land trust;
B) the lessee interest
in a ground lease (including any interest of the lessee in the related
improvements) that provides for a term of 30 or more years when all options to
renew or extend are included, whether or not any portion of the term has
expired;
C) the indirect interest
in real property as reflected by a controlling interest in a real estate
entity:
i) EXAMPLE 1: Shareholder A and
Shareholder B together own all 100 shares of the outstanding stock of
Corporation X. Shareholder A owns 90 shares and Shareholder B owns 10 shares.
Corporation X owns 60 percent of the stock of Corporation Y. Corporation Y's
sole asset is real property in Illinois. Shareholder A transfers all of the
stock in Corporation X to Shareholder B. There has been a transfer of a
controlling interest in a real estate entity (e.g., the 90 percent interest in
Corporation X multiplied by the 60 percent interest in Corporation Y equals the
54 percent interest Shareholder A had in Corporation Y);
ii) EXAMPLE 2: Shareholder A and Shareholder
B together own all 100 shares of the outstanding stock of Corporation X.
Shareholder A owns 90 shares and Shareholder B owns 10 shares. Corporation X
owns 50 percent of the stock of Corporation Y. Corporation Y's sole asset is
real property in Illinois. Shareholder A transfers all of the stock in
Corporation X to Shareholder B. There has not been a transfer of a controlling
interest in a real estate entity (e.g., the 90 percent interest in Corporation
X multiplied by the 50 percent interest in Corporation Y equals the 45 percent
interest Shareholder A had in Corporation Y); and
D) any other type of interest with the right
to use or occupy real property, or the right to receive income from real
property such as air rights, air space rights, cooperative housing rights,
condominium rights, development rights, easements, mining rights, royalty
interests, timber rights, and timeshare rights.
3) All such transfers are presumed taxable
unless the person liable for the payment of the tax qualifies for an exemption
and makes such a notation on the transferring document filed with the
county.
b) Full Actual Consideration.
1) The full actual
consideration for a transfer or aggregated transfers shall be stated in the
transfer declaration. It is the total sale price or amount actually paid (or
required to be paid) for the real estate or beneficial interest in real
property, whether paid in money or otherwise, including personal property, real
property, services, or other item of value.
2) Full actual consideration includes:
A) the amount of any indebtedness or other
obligation (such as liens or judgments) that is cancelled, discharged, or
otherwise released in connection with the transfer;
B) the amount of any mortgages, regardless of
whether the underlying indebtedness is assumed or taken subject to by the
transferee; and
C) the amount of
any back real estate taxes or other taxes paid by the transferee.
3) Full actual consideration does
not include any amount credited against the sale price or refunded for
improvements or repairs.
c) Tax.
1)
Although the full actual consideration is stated in the transfer declaration,
the tax is based on the net consideration after allowed deductions.
2) Deductions will be allowed for the
following amounts only if substantiated in the transferring document or other
supplemental information submitted by the parties:
A) the amount of personal property
transferred to the transferee;
B)
the amount of other real estate transferred to the transferor in an actual
(simultaneous) exchange between the same parties;
C) the amount of any mortgage remaining
outstanding at the time of transfer unless the parties delay its discharge with
the intent to avoid or underpay this tax;
D) the amount of corporate franchise tax
actually paid under the Business Corporation Act of 1983 as a result of a
transfer of a controlling interest in a real estate entity; and
E) the amount of State transfer taxes paid
for any prior transfer of an aggregated interest for a controlling interest
transfer under subsection (d)(4).
3) Allowed deductions will not be included
when computing the value of Revenue Stamps to be sold or affixed to the
transferring document:
A) EXAMPLE 1: Party A
sells real estate to Party B for $100,000. Included in the sale from Party A to
Party B are various items of personal property valued at $5,000. The transfer
declaration should report $100,000 as the full actual consideration for this
transfer, but the value of the personal property should be taken as a deduction
resulting in a net consideration of $95,000 for computing the tax.
B) EXAMPLE 2: Party A pledges real estate as
security for a $25,000 mortgage loan. Party A pays back $10,000 on the
principle and then transfers title to Party B. Party B pays $15,000 to Party A
and assumes responsibility for completing the remaining mortgage payments. The
transfer declaration should report $30,000 as the full actual consideration for
this transfer, but the $15,000 outstanding balance of the mortgage should be
taken as a deduction resulting in a net consideration of $15,000 for computing
the tax.
C) EXAMPLE 3: Party A
pledges real estate as security for a mortgage loan. Party A transfers title to
Party B and waits one week before paying off the mortgage so as to avoid
payment of the tax. This debt is not an outstanding mortgage and should not be
taken as a deduction in computing the tax.
4) Additional tax shall be due at the time
any subsequent payment is made if part of the full actual consideration for a
transfer of a controlling interest in a real estate entity is contingent upon
the occurrence of a future event or the attainment of a future level of
financial performance.
d) Aggregation of Related Transfers.
1) Unless made pursuant to contracts executed
prior to June 1, 2004, related transfers will be aggregated for the purpose of
determining whether there has been a transfer of a controlling interest in a
real estate entity.
2) Related
transfers include:
A) multiple transfers of
interests in the same real estate entity that occur within a rolling 24-month
period by the same transferor. EXAMPLE: Shareholder A owns 100 percent of
Corporation X. Its sole asset is real property in Illinois. Shareholder A
transfers a 40 percent interest to Party B and a 20 percent interest to Party C
within the same year;
B) multiple
transfers of interests in the same real estate entity that occur within a
rolling 24-month period by different transferors who act in concert as a result
of common ownership. EXAMPLE: A parent corporation and a wholly-owned
subsidiary that is acting under the direction of the parent each transfer on
the same day a 30% interest in another entity that owns real estate located in
Illinois. The two corporations have acted in concert because the parent
controls the actions of the subsidiary as a result of common ownership;
and
C) multiple transfers of
interests in the same real estate entity that occur within a rolling 24-month
period by different transferors who act in concert as a result of a common
purpose in structuring and executing the transfers, including instances when
sales agreements contain mutual terms or other agreements bind the transferors
to a particular course of action with respect to the transfer. EXAMPLE:
Partnership X is composed of Partners A and B. Each has a 50 percent
partnership interest. Partnership X owns real estate located in Illinois. In
July of 2004, Partner A and Partner B together decide to raise more capital by
selling a percentage of their respective partnership interests. In October
2004, Partner A and Partner B each transfer a 15 percent partnership interest
to Party C. In January 2005, Partner A and Partner B each transfer a 20 percent
partnership interest to Party D. The partners have acted in concert because
there is a common purpose for the transfers.
3) The full actual consideration for each of
the related transfers will also be aggregated on the transfer declaration in
determining the proportional tax liability of any transferor in a controlling
interest transfer:
A) EXAMPLE 1: Shareholder
A will owe tax on the full actual consideration for the aggregated transfer of
the 60 percent interest in the first of the immediately preceding
examples.
B) EXAMPLE 2: The parent
corporation and the wholly-owned subsidiary will each owe tax on the full
actual consideration for the aggregated transfer of their respective 30 percent
interests in the second of the immediately preceding examples.
C) EXAMPLE 3: Partner A and Partner B will
each owe tax on the full actual consideration for the aggregated transfer of
their respective 15 percent and 20 percent interests in the third of the
immediately preceding examples.
4) The tax is due if there is a subsequent
transfer of an additional interest after the tax has already been paid on a
controlling interest transfer. EXAMPLE: If an additional 10 percent interest is
subsequently transferred in Example 1, then Shareholder A will owe tax on the
full actual consideration for only the subsequent transfer of a 10 percent
interest.
e) Exemptions.
1) A controlling interest transfer that is
accomplished by a transferring document other than a deed or trust document
does not qualify for any of the exemptions under
35 ILCS
200/31-45.
2) A transfer that is accomplished by a deed
or trust document made by, from, or between the United State of America, the
State of Illinois, or any of their respective agencies, instrumentalities, or
political subdivisions qualifies for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(b).
3) A transfer that is accomplished by a deed
or trust document made by a foreign government that is a treaty participant to
the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations qualifies for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(b).
4) An entity is considered a governmental
body so as to qualify for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(b) if it was created to
carry out a public function by a federal, state, or local unit of
government.
5) A sheriff's deed
does not qualify for the governmental exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(b) unless the underlying
transfer relates to property or interests acquired by or from any governmental
body, or property or interests transferred between governmental
bodies.
6) An organization is
organized and operated exclusively for charitable, religious or educational
purposes so as to qualify for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(b) if such a determination
has previously been made by the Department of Revenue (as evidenced by the
issuance of a sales tax exemption letter or a property tax exemption
certificate) or by a court of competent jurisdiction.
7) A transfer that is accomplished by a deed
or trust document as a gift qualifies for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(e).
8) A transfer that is accomplished by a deed
or trust document so as to effect a change of identity or form of organization
or ownership does not qualify for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(e) if the full actual
consideration for the transfer amounts to $100 or more. EXAMPLE: Party A
transfers real estate valued at $100,000 to a partnership in exchange for a 30%
interest in the partnership's assets. The partnership's assets are valued at
$300,000 after this transfer. The full actual consideration for the transfer,
Party A's $90,000 partnership interest, exceeds the $100 threshold so it does
not qualify for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(e).
9) A transfer that is accomplished by a deed
or trust document does not qualify for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(g) unless the transfer
previously qualified for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(c).
10) A transfer that is accomplished by a deed
or trust document made by a parent corporation to a subsidiary corporation does
not qualify for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(j).
11) A transfer that is accomplished by an
actual (simultaneous) exchange of deeds or trust documents between the same
parties qualifies for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(k). EXAMPLE: Party A and
Party B each transfer title to real estate to the other party in a simultaneous
exchange on the same date. Party A's real estate is valued at $50,000. Party
B's real estate is valued at $55,000. The transfer is exempt from the tax
except for the money difference or money's worth paid from one party to the
other under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(k). The transfer
declaration for the transfer from Party A to Party B should report $50,000 as
the full actual consideration for the transfer, but the value of Party B's
property should be taken as a deduction resulting in a net consideration of $0
in computing the tax. Party A must add an exemption notation on the
transferring document that is filed with the county. The transfer declaration
for the transfer from Party B to Party A should report $55,000 as the full
actual consideration for the transfer, but the value of Party A's property
should be taken as a deduction resulting in a net consideration of $5,000 in
computing the tax. Party B must add an exemption notation and affix the
appropriate amount of Revenue Stamps on the transferring document that is filed
with the county.
12) A deferred
exchange that is accomplished by a deed or trust document does not qualify for
the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(k). EXAMPLE: Party A and
Party B each transfer title to real estate to the other party in a deferred
exchange on different dates. Party A's real estate is valued at $50,000. Party
B's real estate is valued at $55,000. The transfer declaration for the transfer
from Party A to Party B should report $50,000 as the full actual consideration
for the transfer. The transfer declaration for the transfer from Party B to
Party A should report $55,000 as the full actual consideration for the
transfer. No deduction should be taken in computing the tax on either transfer
declaration because deferred exchanges do not qualify for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(k).
13) A deferred ("Starker") exchange that is
accomplished by a deed or trust document does not qualify for the exemption
under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(k) even if it is exempt for
federal tax purposes under Section 1031 of the Internal Revenue Code (
26 USC
1031) . EXAMPLE: Party A transfers title to
real estate valued at $50,000 to Party B. Party B does not transfer any real
estate to Party A in the transaction. The transfer declaration for the transfer
from Party A to Party B should report $50,000 as the full actual consideration
for the transfer. Party C subsequently transfers title to real estate valued at
$75,000 to Party A. The transfer declaration for the transfer from Party C to
Party A should report $75,000 as the full actual consideration for the
transfer. No deduction should be taken in computing the tax on either transfer
declaration because property is not being simultaneously exchanged in either
transaction so as to qualify for the exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(k).
14) A sheriff's deed does not qualify for the
exemption under
35 ILCS
200/31-45(l) unless it appears on the
face of the deed that the grantee is the holder of a mortgage or an assignee
pursuant to either a mortgage foreclosure proceeding or a transfer in lieu of
foreclosure.
15) A real estate
entity must be liable and have actually paid corporate franchise taxes under
the Business Corporation Act of 1983 as a result of a controlling interest
transfer in order to claim the exemption under
35
ILCS 200/31-46.
f) Forms.
Instructions covering forms issued pursuant to this Part and not in contravention of this Part, are incorporated herein and shall have the same force and effect as this Part.
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