
When you’ve spent decades building a real estate portfolio, the last thing you want is for your heirs to lose 30–40% of it to taxes and unnecessary costs. Yet that’s exactly what happens to many families who haven’t implemented proper real estate succession planning.
At Wisco, we work with investors who’ve built substantial wealth through real estate — rental properties, syndications, commercial assets, and more. And increasingly, they’re asking the right question: how do I pass this on without the government taking half?
The answer isn’t found in flashy strategies or loopholes. It’s found in disciplined planning that addresses three critical elements: step-up in basis, leverage strategies, and liquidity planning. When structured correctly, real estate succession planning protects generational wealth while keeping families out of forced-sale situations and tax disasters.
Here’s what you need to know.
The current estate tax exemption sits at $13.99 million per individual ($27.98 million for married couples) in 2025. That sounds generous — until you realize it’s scheduled to drop significantly in 2026 unless Congress acts.
Even if your estate stays below the exemption threshold, income taxes, capital gains, and state-level estate taxes can still take a meaningful bite. Add in illiquid assets, unclear ownership structures, and family dynamics, and you’ve got a recipe for stress, conflict, and wealth erosion.
Real estate succession planning addresses all of it. Not by avoiding taxes entirely — but by structuring transfers in ways that preserve capital, maintain cash flow, and keep properties in the family’s hands.
One of the most powerful tools in real estate succession planning is the step-up in basis. It’s simple in concept but profound in impact.
When you purchase property, your cost basis is the amount you paid (plus improvements). If you bought a rental property for $200,000 and it’s now worth $800,000, you have a $600,000 capital gain embedded in that asset.
If you sell it during your lifetime, you’ll owe capital gains tax on that $600,000 (minus depreciation recapture).
But if you hold it until death, your heirs receive a step-up in basis. That means the property’s basis resets to its fair market value at the time of death — in this case, $800,000. The $600,000 gain disappears for tax purposes.
If your heirs sell immediately, they pay zero capital gains tax.
Step-up in basis is one of the few remaining wealth-building advantages that favors holding real estate long-term. For families with appreciated properties, it can save hundreds of thousands — sometimes millions — in taxes.
This is why many seasoned investors avoid selling appreciating assets late in life. Instead, they focus on cash flow, refinancing when needed, and holding for the step-up.
There’s an important nuance here. Depreciation recapture — the tax owed on depreciation deductions taken during ownership — is also eliminated at death when basis steps up.
That means if you’ve been writing off depreciation for 20 years, those deductions don’t come back to haunt your heirs. The slate is wiped clean.
For investors who’ve accumulated large portfolios with significant depreciation, this is a game-changer in real estate succession planning.
Leverage doesn’t just build wealth during life — it can also protect it during transfer.
When calculating estate value, the IRS looks at net equity, not gross property value. If you own a $2 million property with a $1 million mortgage, your taxable estate includes only the $1 million in equity.
This creates a strategic opportunity. By maintaining conservative leverage on appreciating assets, investors can:
One common mistake in succession planning is leaving heirs with valuable properties but no cash to pay estate taxes or cover operating expenses.
Strategic refinancing before death can solve this. By pulling equity out through a loan, you create liquidity that can be used for:
This approach keeps properties in the family while ensuring heirs aren’t forced into distressed sales.
At Wisco, we’re not fans of over-leveraging. But used conservatively, leverage can be a powerful tool in real estate succession planning. The goal is not to maximize debt — it’s to maintain flexibility, liquidity, and control as the estate transitions to the next generation.
Real estate is a wealth-building machine. It’s also illiquid. That’s fine during life, but it can create major problems during estate settlement.
Estate taxes (if applicable) are due within nine months of death. Property taxes, insurance, and operating expenses don’t stop. If heirs don’t have cash on hand, they’re forced to sell — often quickly and at unfavorable terms.
Effective real estate succession planning anticipates this and builds in solutions.
Here are the most common approaches:
Life Insurance
Life insurance creates instant, tax-free liquidity at death. For estates with significant real estate holdings, a well-structured life insurance policy can cover estate taxes and transition costs without forcing property sales.
The premiums are often far lower than the taxes they offset — especially for investors in good health.
Cash Reserves
Some investors maintain dedicated reserves specifically for estate settlement. These funds can be held in the estate or in an irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT) to keep them outside the taxable estate.
Installment Sales to Heirs
In some cases, parents sell property to heirs over time using an installment sale. This spreads out the tax liability and provides liquidity without triggering an immediate taxable event.
This strategy works well when heirs have income or assets to support payments — or when the property itself generates cash flow to fund the payments.
Refinancing Before Death
As mentioned earlier, strategic refinancing can pull equity out of properties while keeping them in the family. The loan balance reduces estate value, and the cash provides liquidity for settlement costs.
Not every estate needs millions in liquid reserves. The key is matching liquidity planning to the specific size, complexity, and structure of the real estate portfolio.
At Wisco, we encourage investors to run the numbers with their advisors. Know what’s owed, when it’s due, and where the money will come from. Clarity eliminates panic.
How you hold title to property matters as much as the properties themselves.
Holding property in your personal name is simple — but it offers no asset protection, no control over how property is divided, and minimal tax planning flexibility.
For investors with significant holdings, individual ownership is usually the least effective structure for real estate succession planning.
This is common for married couples. When one spouse dies, the property automatically transfers to the survivor without probate.
The downside? Only the deceased spouse’s share receives a step-up in basis (in most states). The surviving spouse’s basis remains unchanged, which can create capital gains exposure later.
Trusts avoid probate, maintain privacy, and provide clear instructions for property distribution. They’re flexible during life and become irrevocable at death.
For real estate investors, trusts are often the foundation of succession planning. They allow for:
For larger portfolios, FLPs and LLCs allow investors to transfer fractional interests to heirs over time while retaining control.
These structures can also provide valuation discounts for estate tax purposes, as fractional interests in real estate partnerships are less liquid than direct ownership.
For high-net-worth investors, QPRTs can remove a primary or vacation home from the taxable estate while allowing the owner to continue living in it for a set period.
This is a more advanced strategy, but it can be powerful when real estate succession planning involves valuable personal-use property.
Annual gifting is one of the simplest ways to reduce estate size while transferring wealth during life.
In 2025, individuals can gift up to $19,000 per recipient per year ($38,000 for married couples) without using any lifetime exemption.
For real estate investors, this can mean gifting:
Over time, annual gifting compounds. A couple with three children could transfer $114,000 per year without any gift tax consequences.
In some cases, gifting appreciated property during life makes sense — but it comes with a tradeoff. The recipient inherits your cost basis, not a stepped-up basis.
This strategy works best when:
We’ve seen what happens when families skip planning.
Real estate succession planning prevents all of this. But only if it’s done proactively, not reactively.
At Wisco, we believe succession planning should be simple, clear, and designed around how your family actually functions — not how a textbook says it should.
We’re not estate planners or attorneys. But we’ve worked with enough investors to know what works and what creates problems. The most effective real estate succession planning strategies share a few common traits:
If you own investment real estate, you should be thinking about succession planning. But it becomes critical when:
The best time to start? Five to ten years before you think you’ll need it. Succession planning takes time to implement correctly, and rushing it can create mistakes.
Do I lose control if I start transferring property now?
Not if structured correctly. Trusts, LLCs, and FLPs allow you to transfer ownership while retaining management control during your lifetime.
Should I sell properties and simplify before I die?
Not necessarily. Selling triggers capital gains taxes that could be avoided with proper succession planning. In many cases, holding for the step-up is more tax-efficient.
What if my heirs don’t want the properties?
That’s a conversation to have now. Some families benefit from selling properties within a trust and distributing cash. Others use professional management so heirs can remain passive owners.
How does this work with syndications or passive investments?
Most syndications are held in LLCs or partnerships, which transfer easily through trusts or estate plans. The step-up in basis still applies to your share of the underlying real estate.
Building wealth through real estate takes discipline, patience, and long-term thinking. Protecting that wealth for the next generation requires the same mindset.
Real estate succession planning isn’t about dodging taxes or gaming the system. It’s about being intentional with what you’ve built — and making sure the people you care about benefit from your work, not just the IRS.
Step-up in basis, strategic leverage, and liquidity planning are the three pillars. Combine them with clear structures and professional guidance, and you’ve got a plan that works.
If you’ve been building a real estate portfolio and haven’t thought through how it transfers, now’s the time. The earlier you plan, the more options you have — and the more wealth you preserve.
At Wisco, we work with investors who take the long view. If you’re thinking about how your real estate holdings fit into your broader estate plan — or you just want to talk through your options — we’re happy to help.
Contact us and let’s start a conversation because the best succession plan is the one you put in place before you need it.