Ground Leases

Ground lease investment sourcing for 1031 exchange buyers seeking long-term, passive income from land ownership with credit tenants and minimal landlord responsibilities.

Ground lease investments offer 1031 exchange buyers one of the most passive forms of real estate ownership available. In a ground lease structure, you own the land and lease it to a tenant who owns or constructs the building and handles all property-level responsibilities including taxes, insurance, maintenance, and structural repairs. Ground leases typically feature terms of 50 to 99 years with credit tenants including national retailers, restaurant chains, convenience stores, and other single tenant NNN retail operators. For Washington DC investors, ground leases provide predictable income with virtually zero landlord responsibilities, periodic rent escalations, and the security of owning land that reverts to you with all improvements at lease expiration. We identify ground lease opportunities in all 50 states and coordinate with qualified intermediaries to ensure these acquisitions close within your 1031 exchange timeline.

Triple Net Lease Perspective

Passive income backed by tenant responsibility

Triple net (NNN) tenants agree to cover taxes, insurance, and most property maintenance, so ownership feels more like collecting rent than managing a daily operations diary. When paired with investment-grade tenants, such as national convenience, pharmacy, or quick-service restaurant brands, the income stream stays predictable even when the cycle swings.

Absolute NNN leases

These 10-to-25-year corporate-guaranteed commitments hand every cost burden to the tenant so you simply hold title and collect rent. Tenants like Dollar General and Walgreens treat the property as their own brand asset, lowering your time spent on oversight.

Regular NNN leases

Some NNN structures keep a handful of landlord responsibilities such as roof or parking maintenance, but they still deliver steady cash flow and inflation-hedged rent bumps. They pair well with tenants such as Starbucks or industrial operators who may share a limited list of expenses.

Whether you lean toward absolute or more collaborative triple net leases, these assets flex across states, partner with high-credit tenants, and magnify the benefits of a well-structured 1031 exchange.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do ground leases work as 1031 exchange replacement properties?

In a ground lease investment, you acquire ownership of the land and lease it to a tenant who owns or builds the improvements. The tenant is responsible for all property-level costs including taxes, insurance, maintenance, and structural repairs. Ground leases qualify as like-kind replacement property for 1031 exchanges. For Washington DC investors, ground leases provide one of the most passive income streams available in real estate, with credit tenants like national retail and restaurant brands on long-term leases of 50 to 99 years.

What are the advantages of ground lease investments?

Ground leases offer minimal landlord responsibilities since the tenant handles all property-level operations, predictable income with periodic rent escalations, credit tenant security from national brands, no building depreciation concerns since you only own the land, and reversion rights where the land and all improvements return to you at lease expiration. For 1031 exchange buyers seeking truly passive income, ground leases with single tenant NNN retail operators provide an attractive alternative to traditional property ownership.

What risks should I consider with ground lease investments?

Key considerations include the long lease duration which limits your ability to reposition the asset, potential below-market rent if escalation provisions do not keep pace with inflation, subordination clauses that may give the tenant's lender priority over your land ownership, and the credit quality of the tenant over a very long time horizon. We review every ground lease for Washington DC investors, analyzing rent escalation structures, subordination terms, tenant creditworthiness, and reversion provisions to ensure the investment meets your objectives.