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DST 1031 Exchange Timeline: From Sale Proceeds to Subscription Documents
by Paulo Aguilar, CFA, CAIA on Feb 04, 2026
For experienced real estate owners, the mechanics of a 1031 exchange are usually familiar. Where outcomes tend to diverge is timing. When Delaware Statutory Trusts (DSTs) are used as replacement property, the exchange timeline introduces a level of sequencing discipline that is often underestimated.
DST exchanges compress decision-making into a narrow window while documentation, funding mechanics, and allocations move on fixed rails. Investors who treat the process as administrative often discover that optionality disappears earlier than expected.
We often tell clients:
In a DST exchange, most outcomes are determined before the subscription documents are ever signed.
What follows is a clear, simplified view of the DST 1031 exchange timeline, highlighting where judgment matters and where the process becomes procedural.
The Sale Closes and the Clock Starts
The timeline begins the moment the relinquished property closes. Sale proceeds are transferred directly to a qualified intermediary, not to the investor. From that point forward, the exchange is governed by statutory deadlines.
Key considerations
- Proceeds cannot be accessed or redirected
- The 45-day and 180-day clocks are fixed
- Planning flexibility declines immediately after closing
Once the sale occurs, the exchange is no longer conceptual. It is operational.
Identification Happens Before Commitment, But Not Without Consequences
Within 45 days of sale, DST offerings must be formally identified under IRS rules. This step is often misunderstood as provisional.
In practice, identification shapes what is realistically possible, even if allocations are not yet finalized.
Key considerations
- DSTs must be identified formally, not informally
- Over-identification does not eliminate execution risk
- Availability can change during active exchange windows
Identification should reflect a credible path to funding, not optional curiosity.
Due Diligence Must Run in Parallel
DST offerings are typically fully structured by the time they are available. That means meaningful diligence must occur before or during the identification period, not after it.
Waiting to engage until the clock is running compresses judgment into a narrow window.
Key considerations
- Offering documents are standardized and non-negotiable
- Sponsor quality and asset fundamentals matter most
- Late diligence limits real choice
DST exchanges reward preparation, not reaction.
Subscription Documents Lock the Decision
Once a DST allocation is accepted, subscription documents are executed and exchange funds are wired from the qualified intermediary to the trust.
This is the point where planning gives way to execution.
Key considerations
- Allocations are subject to availability, not preference
- Subscription documents are binding
- Structural changes after funding are generally not possible
At this stage, flexibility largely disappears.
The DST 1031 Exchange Timeline at a Glance
The DST exchange process is best understood as a short, sequential checklist rather than a complex flowchart.
- Relinquished property closes
- Proceeds move to qualified intermediary
- DST options reviewed and completed diligence
- DSTs formally identified within 45 days
- Allocations requested and confirmed
- Subscription documents executed
- Funds wired to DST
- Exchange completed within 180 days
This sequence is predictable. What varies is the quality of decisions made before step one.
How to Think About the Timeline Strategically
The DST timeline is not complicated, but it is unforgiving. The mistake is focusing on documents instead of decisions.
Investors should concentrate effort on:
- Pre-sale planning and scenario modeling
- Early evaluation of DST sponsors and structures
- Realistic assessment of liquidity and income needs
- Alignment with long-term portfolio and estate objectives
As one advisor perspective often emphasized is:
The DST exchange timeline is rigid by design. The only flexibility is before it starts.
Conclusion
A DST 1031 exchange does not unfold gradually. It moves through a fixed sequence that compresses decision-making into a narrow window.
Understanding the timeline from sale proceeds to subscription documents helps clarify where judgment matters and where the process becomes procedural. The most successful exchanges are shaped before the sale, not after funds are already in motion.
A structured planning discussion can help align timing, structure, and expectations before deadlines convert decisions into constraints.
General Disclosure
This material is provided for informational and educational purposes only and is based on information from sources we believe to be reliable. However, its accuracy is not guaranteed, and it is not intended to be the sole basis for investment decisions or to meet specific investment needs.
Wealthstone Group does not offer tax or legal advice. This content should not replace professional advice tailored to your individual situation.
Not an offer to buy, nor a solicitation to sell securities. All investing involves risk of loss of some or all principal invested. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Speak to your finance and/or tax professional prior to investing. Any information provided is for informational purposes only. Securities offered through Arkadios Capital, member FINRA/SIPC. Advisory Services offered through Arkadios Wealth. Wealthstone Group and Arkadios are not affiliated through any ownership.
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