T-12 Financial Review
Trailing 12-month financial statement analysis for 1031 exchange replacement properties, verifying income, expenses, and net operating income before acquisition.
Related Services
Rent Roll Analysis
Detailed rent roll analysis for 1031 exchange replacement properties, verifying tenant occupancy, lease terms, rental rates, and income stability before acquisition.
Market Comp Analysis
Comprehensive market comparable analysis for 1031 exchange replacement properties, including sales comps, rent comps, and cap rate benchmarking across all 50 states.
Lender Preflight
Pre-qualification coordination with lenders experienced in 1031 exchange transactions, ensuring financing is ready before your replacement property closing deadline.
Property Identification
Nationwide sourcing of single tenant NNN retail and shopping center properties across all 50 states. We help 1031 exchange buyers quickly find high quality replacement properties with credit tenants, predictable income, and minimal management.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a T-12 and why does it matter for a 1031 exchange?
A T-12 is the trailing 12-month operating statement showing actual income and expenses for a property. It matters for 1031 exchange buyers because it reveals the true financial performance of a replacement property, as opposed to pro forma projections that may be overly optimistic. For Washington DC investors on exchange timelines, verifying the T-12 quickly and accurately is essential to making informed acquisition decisions and avoiding properties that underperform expectations.
What expense categories do you review in a T-12 analysis?
We review every expense line item including property taxes, insurance premiums, utilities, repairs and maintenance, property management fees, landscaping, pest control, legal and accounting, advertising, payroll, capital expenditures, and reserve contributions. For single tenant NNN retail properties, many of these expenses are passed through to the tenant, but we verify that the lease actually requires the tenant to pay them. For multifamily and other property types, we compare each expense to industry benchmarks and local market norms to identify any anomalies.
How do you verify the accuracy of a seller-provided T-12?
We cross-reference the T-12 against supporting documentation including bank statements, property tax bills, insurance policies, utility invoices, vendor contracts, and management agreements. We compare the reported rental income against the rent roll and lease terms, verify that reported expenses align with actual invoices, and look for missing or understated expense categories. For Washington DC exchange investors, this verification process ensures you are paying a fair price based on actual, not inflated, net operating income.