At our December DIG Philly meeting, Fred Hubler dropped a truth bomb about 1031 exchange timing: "Here's the IRS rule: you have 45 days to identify. I'm here to tell you how life works, at least in my world. Only the crappy DSTs are alive for 45 days."
If you're waiting until you're under pressure to pick your DST investments, you're already too late.
When you sell a property in a 1031 exchange, the IRS gives you strict deadlines:
45 days from closing to identify replacement properties180 days from closing to complete the exchange
These aren't flexible. Miss the deadline by even one day, and your entire exchange fails—triggering all the taxes you were trying to defer.
Most investors hear "45 days to identify" and think: "Okay, I'll sell my property, then spend the next six weeks researching DST options and making my decision."
That strategy is a disaster waiting to happen.
"We sold that in 3 [days] like it filled. $40 million is nothing."
Here's what Hubler is telling you: Quality DST offerings don't stay available for 45 days. They sell out in days—sometimes hours—after being released.
Why DSTs sell out so fast:
Each DST has a fixed number of investor slots. Once it's subscribed, it's closed. There's no "making more shares available."
$80 million Amazon distribution centers or Class A multifamily with blue-chip sponsors don't come to market every week. When they do, sophisticated investors move immediately.
Thousands of investors are constantly under 45-day deadlines. When a good DST drops, they're all competing for limited slots.
Top financial advisors and CPAs have clients waiting. The moment a quality DST is available, it gets distributed to networks of pre-qualified investors.
More capital looking for quality DSTs than quality DSTs available. Economics 101: scarce goods get bid up quickly.
The timeline reality:
If you're starting your search on day 10 of your 45-day window, you're shopping the clearance rack.
This is harsh but important. Hubler isn't being elitist—he's describing market reality.
DSTs still available after weeks typically have issues:
Good DSTs sell out because:
Think of it like real estate generally: The best properties go under contract within days of listing. What's still on the market after 90 days? Usually properties with problems.
"My job is before it's sold, before that 45 day, 'cause no one makes a good decision under pressure. And if you think you do, you're the person I'm talking about. You really don't."
This is the psychological trap of the 45-day deadline
Remember: You're not just picking an investment. You're picking something you'll own for 5-7 years minimum, that you cannot exit early, and that will determine the tax treatment of potentially millions in deferred gains.
A rushed decision made under deadline pressure means:
And if you're planning to chain multiple 1031 exchanges:This decision affects not just 5-7 years, but potentially decades of your wealth-building strategy and eventual estate planning.
Hubler's job is to help clients identify quality DSTs before the 45-day clock starts—ideally before they even list their property for sale.
The smart timeline:
This approach ensures:
Hubler's calling out a specific type of investor: The one who thinks they perform better under pressure.
"I work great under deadlines!""I make better decisions when I have to decide quickly!""Pressure brings out my best thinking!"
No. No, you don't. Nobody does.
Research on decision-making under pressure shows:
The investors who think they make better decisions under pressure are exactly the ones most vulnerable to making poor decisions they'll regret for years
This is why Hubler emphasizes "my job is before it's sold, before that 45 day."
A good DST advisor:
A bad advisor:
The 45-day identification deadline is real and inflexible. But if you're starting your DST search when that clock starts ticking, you've already lost.
Good DSTs sell out in days, not weeks. Quality is scarce, and sophisticated investors move fast.
"No one makes a good decision under pressure. And if you think you do, you're the person I'm talking about."
The solution isn't to make faster decisions under deadline stress. The solution is to eliminate the pressure by identifying quality DSTs before you need them.
Start the conversation months before your property closes. Understand the market. Know the sponsors. Pre-identify quality options.
Then, when your property sells and the 45-day clock starts, you're selecting from a pre-vetted menu of quality options—not desperately accepting whatever hasn't sold out yet.
Because in 5-7 years, when you're still locked into that DST, you won't remember feeling relieved that you made the deadline.
You'll only remember whether you made the right choice.
Delaware Statutory Trusts require accredited investor status and have minimum investment thresholds. The 45-day identification and 180-day completion deadlines for 1031 exchanges are strict IRS requirements. Quality DST offerings can sell out quickly—advanced planning is essential. This article is for educational purposes only. Always consult with qualified tax, legal, and financial professionals before making investment decisions.