Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act (FIRPTA)

Quick Takeaways

  • FIRPTA, or the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act, as enacted in 1980.
  • Foreign investors are given a Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) to pay taxes or to file for withholdings on properties they buy and seller in the US.
  • The PATH Act of 2015 changed the withholding rate of FIRPTA from 10% to 15% on properties that sold for more than $1 million, among many other provisions.

Source: New FIRPTA Regulations Conform and Update Changes from the PATH Act (PricewaterhouseCoopers, Feb. 23, 2016)

The Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act (FIRPTA) was enacted in 1980, initially as a response by Congress to concerns about increasing foreign ownership of farm land in the United States.  The major purpose of FIRPTA was to establish equity of tax treatment in U.S. real property between foreign and domestic investors. 

So far in the 116th Congress, one bill to repeal FIRPTA has been introduced in the House of Representatives that has attracted the support of many commercial real estate stakeholders in the country, as well as a high number of bipartisan cosponsors on the Ways and Means Committee.  Proponents of this bill, the "Invest in America Act"(H.R. 2210), believe it would increase the amount of foreign capital invested in real estate in the U.S.and also create jobs.

See References for more information.

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