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The PATH Act includes certain revenue raising provisions to offset, in part, the tax revenue loss anticipated to result of the above-described tax reform provisions of the Act. Such revenue raisers include (among other technical changes) the following provisions: A. Increase in FIRPTA Withholding Rate. The purchaser of a U.S. real property interest from a non- U.S. person was previously required to withhold 10 percent of the purchase price under FIRPTA. The PATH Act increases this rate to 15 percent for dispositions occurring after the 60th day following enactment, but maintains the 10 percent rate for sales of residential property for between $300,000 and $1,000,000. This provision is not a tax increase but is designed to ensure that FIRPTA withholding collects a sufficient portion of the taxes owed. B. Restriction on REIT Spin-offs. In recent years, it has become increasingly common for large corporate taxpayers to reduce their tax bills by contributing real estate used in their businesses to a subsidiary, spinning off the subsidiary in a tax free transaction under Code section 355, and then having the spun-out corporation making a REIT election. The PATH Act curtails such activity by (i) providing that neither the distributing corporation nor the spun-out corporation can make a REIT election for ten years after that corporation was involved in a Section 355 transaction and (ii) denying tax-free treatment to spin-offs in which the distributing corporation or sopun-out corporation (but not both) is a REIT. 5. CONCLUSION The revisions to the FIRPTA and REIT rules discussed above represent a potentially large expansion of the incentives for foreign investment in U.S. real property interests, especially for foreign pension funds. Sponsors of U.S. real property investment funds and foreign investors with interests in U.S. real estate assets should review the new provisions to determine whether such persons could benefit from such U.S. tax law changes. Sadis & Goldberg LLP Please feel free to discuss any aspect of this A/ert with your regular Sadis & Goldberg contact or with any of the partners, whose names and contact information are provided below. Alex Gelinas, 212.573.8159, agelinas@sglawyers.com Daniel G. Viola, 212.573.8038, dviola@sglawyers.com Danielle Epstein-Day, 212.573.8416, depstein@sglawyers.com Douglas Hirsch, 212.573.6670, dhirsch@sglawyers.com Erika Winkler, 212.573.8022, ewinkler@sglawyers.com Jamie Kim, 212.573.8034, jkim@sglawyers.com Jeffrey Goldberg, 212.573.6666, jgoldberg@sglawyers.com Jennifer Rossan, 212.573.8783, jrossan@sglawyers.com John Araneo, 212.573.8158, jaraneo@sglawyers.com Lance Friedler, 212.573.8030, lfriedler@sglawyers.com Mitchell Taras, 212.5738417, mtaras@sglawyers.com Paul Fasciano, 212.573.8025, pfasciano@sglawyers.com Ron S. Geffner, 212.573.6660, rgeffner@sglawyers.com Sam Lieberman, 212.573.8164, slieberman@sglawyers.com Steven Etkind, 212.573.8412, setkind@sglawyers.com Steven Huttler, 212.573.8424, shuttler@sglawyers.com Yehuda Braunstein, 212.573.8029, ybraunstein@sglawyers.com Yelena Maltser, 212.573.8429, ymaltser@sglawyers.com HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026832

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Document Details

Filename HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026832.jpg
File Size 0.0 KB
OCR Confidence 85.0%
Has Readable Text Yes
Text Length 3,177 characters
Indexed 2026-02-04T16:59:59.238097