Considering a Capital Gains Tax Deferral Solution for Your Investment Property Sale?

Strategy Guide

This free strategy guide helps investors understand how to defer up to 40% in capital gains taxes when selling an investment property by using a Delaware Statutory Trust within a 1031 Exchange.

  • Understand the real tradeoffs of DSTs
  • Avoid common mismatches between investor goals and DST structures
  • Get clarity before reviewing any offering
Get the Tax Deferral Strategy Guide
About Archer Investors

Provided by Archer Investors, a real estate investment firm specializing in DSTs, 1031 exchanges, and long-term portfolio planning for accredited investors.

Who It's For

This guide is designed for you if...

  • You're interested in deferring up to 40% of capital gains tax owed at the time of selling your investment property
  • You want to understand how DSTs fit into an overall exchange strategy
  • You care about preserving wealth strategically

This guide assumes basic tax deferral knowledge through 1031 exchanges and focuses on decision making, not definitions.

The Challenge

Most investors don't get tripped up by the rules.

They get tripped up by order of decisions.

Tax deferred avenues through DSTs can be powerful tools inside a 1031 Exchange when selling an investment property. Many investors evaluate DSTs too late, compare them incorrectly, or treat them as interchangeable with other replacement options.

This guide is designed to help you think about DSTs in the right sequence, before constraints set in.

Inside the guide, you'll learn:

  • How to preserve wealth strategically through tax deferral initiatives that Archer Investors specializes in
  • How timing affects your available options
  • Common tradeoffs investors overlook when comparing replacements
  • How to approach DSTs as part of a broader plan
Get Your Copy

Get the Free Tax Deferral 1031 Exchange & DST Strategy Guide

We ask a few questions so we can tailor the information to where you are in the 1031 exchange process. This information is used for educational purposes only.

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An accredited investor, per Rule 501 of Regulation D, includes individuals with a net worth over $1 million (excluding primary residence) or an annual income above $200,000 ($300,000 with a spouse). Qualified entities include trusts with over $5 million in assets, banks, insurance companies, and certain company executives, allowing them to invest in unregistered securities.

No obligation. Educational use only.