Friday, September 6, 2013

How to help a cousin buy a home with your Real Estate IRA

One of our New Direction IRA client representatives recently spoke with a prospective client who asked us to frame some ways for his IRA to help a cousin buy a home. The cousin has a good job, but he wasn’t sure about his credit rating nor did he have the money for a down payment. We spent some time talking about the ways that IRAs can participate in real estate and the IRS rules associated with that participation. Below is an excerpt that was sent to the cousin to get the ball rolling. If you are in a similar situation, perhaps this may help you get your thoughts together.

partner with real estate ira, ira, real estate ira, what is iraScenario 1 – My IRA buys the house (the property would literally be deeded to the IRA). It secures a non-recourse loan to do this. Typically, a lender will want 30-40% down. So our max purchase price would be about $150K I am guessing. You would pay rent to the IRA or we can set up a rent-to-own agreement. This set-up, depending on the purchase price might leave me with little cash; so, you may need to pay for any unexpected repairs, which of course, would come off the rent or be recognized in some way. The advantages to this method is that you would not have any initial cost and would not have to qualify for financing. And, you could buy my IRA out whenever it was feasible for you.

Scenario 2 – We buy the house as tenants-in-common. My IRA and you are the deed holders, each owning a percentage of the house. This can be kind of fluid but the basic idea might be that I put in the ~$50K, and you come up with the rest. If you need financing for your part, the collateral for the loan would have to be something other than the house. It would also be helpful for you to let me know what your exit strategy might be. In this set-up, I really just contribute the IRA money in exchange for a percentage ownership in the house, but from that point, pretty much all the financial burden would fall on you.

Scenario 3 – I can simply loan you the money that I have available and we can set up the rate, term, and such in a way that is financially possible for you. Like interest only for several years, with a balloon payment down the road or some such. This set-up would mean that you are the deed holder, and the financing would be whatever you can work out.

Because you are a non-disqualified person to my IRA, we have a good deal of flexibility in how we set this up. In part, it will come down to how you want to play it and what your financial options are. One thing that I will mention is that my IRA’s participation always needs to be titled as the IRA. The important thing is to not put just my name on an offer or any type of legal document.


As a point of clarification, disqualified persons to an IRA include the IRA holder, their spouse, and lineal ascendants and descendants (and their spouses). However, the sides of the family tree, siblings, aunts and uncles, cousins, etc. are not disqualified persons.