Decision pressure
CRE Tax Briefs
Forgiven Is Not Forgotten: The Tax Work After a Lender Takes the Building
A CRE debt workout can create a disposition calculation, cancellation-of-debt income, basis consequences, and partner-level questions long after the property changes hands.

Planning brief
Use the idea while the planning window is still open.
This note is designed to turn a tax topic into a practical owner, CPA, or advisor conversation before documents, deadlines, and return positions lock in.
Topic
CRE Tax Briefs
Read time
8 min read
Focus
Advisor-ready
Debt workout decision map
One lender event can create two different tax models.
Start with what the legal documents do to the collateral. Then test the income, basis, entity, and election consequences before the owner commits.
Principal reduction or material modification
- Possible cancellation-of-debt income
- Section 108 eligibility and limits
- Basis or tax-attribute reduction
Short sale, deed in lieu, or foreclosure
- Recourse or nonrecourse classification
- Amount realized and adjusted basis
- Gain, loss, recapture, and possible COD
Coordinated output
Exposure, election, and document comparison
The route is fact-specific. Bankruptcy counsel, transaction counsel, and the owner's CPA make the final legal and return-position decisions.
A CRE debt workout can create a disposition calculation, cancellation-of-debt income, basis consequences, and partner-level questions long after the property changes hands.
The building can be gone while the tax questions remain
An owner may sign a deed in lieu, complete a short sale, lose a property through foreclosure, or receive a principal reduction and reasonably believe the financial event is over. The tax analysis can begin at exactly that point.
A lender may issue Form 1099-C for canceled debt or Form 1099-A when secured property is acquired or abandoned. Those forms are inputs, not a complete tax answer. The owner and CPA still need to determine what happened to the property, whether the debt was recourse or nonrecourse, the property's fair market value and adjusted basis, and whether a statutory exclusion applies.
An illustrative owner scenario
Consider a small multifamily owner whose bridge loan matures after operating costs and interest rates rise. The lender agrees to take the building and release the remaining obligation. The owner no longer controls the property and receives no sale proceeds, yet the return may still need to account for a property disposition, canceled debt, depreciation history, and entity or partner-level consequences.
That result feels counterintuitive because taxable income is not always tied to cash received. It is tied to the legal and tax character of the transaction.
The first fork: retain the property or transfer it
If the owner retains the property
A discounted payoff, principal reduction, or significant loan modification may create cancellation-of-debt income. The analysis then turns to possible exceptions or exclusions and the cost of using them. Bankruptcy, insolvency, and qualified real property business indebtedness are not interchangeable labels. Each has eligibility rules, limitations, filing requirements, and possible tax-attribute or basis reductions.
If the lender receives the property
The recourse or nonrecourse classification becomes central. A transfer subject to recourse debt can require a disposition calculation and a separate cancellation-of-debt calculation. With nonrecourse debt, the outstanding debt is generally included in the amount realized on the disposition, and a separate cancellation-of-debt amount generally does not arise from surrendering the collateral.
The property basis, depreciation already claimed, fair market value, debt balance, transaction costs, and character of the property all affect the result.
Section 108 relief is a trade, not a blank check
Internal Revenue Code Section 108 can exclude certain discharge-of-indebtedness income in a title 11 bankruptcy case, to the extent of insolvency, or for qualifying real property business indebtedness when the statutory requirements and election rules are met. An exclusion may require the taxpayer to reduce basis or other tax attributes, so the current-year benefit can change depreciation and gain calculations later.
Form 982 is used to report qualifying exclusions and related attribute reductions. A qualified real property business indebtedness election is time-sensitive and should be evaluated before the return deadline, not reconstructed after the fact.
Partnerships require a partner-level file
When a partnership owns the property, the entity may recognize and allocate cancellation-of-debt income, while Section 108 exclusions and related tax attributes can depend on each partner's facts. Outside basis, liability shifts, insolvency, passive losses, guarantees, and state treatment may produce different outcomes among partners in the same workout.
This is why a single property-level estimate is not enough for a partnership or syndicate.
Build the workout tax file before signing
- Loan agreements, guarantees, payoff statements, and lender correspondence
- Draft modification, short-sale, deed-in-lieu, or foreclosure documents
- Current debt balance and a supportable property fair market value
- Adjusted tax basis, depreciation schedule, suspended losses, and prior elections
- Entity chart, partner ownership, outside-basis information, and liability allocations
- Solvency or bankruptcy facts and the states connected to the taxpayer and property
- CPA, attorney, lender-counsel, and property-advisor responsibilities
JPOPE planning lens
The useful question is not simply whether debt was forgiven. It is which tax path the legal documents create, which facts determine the amount, which exclusions may apply, and what future basis or attribute cost follows the current-year relief.
JPOPE helps owners and advisors assemble those facts and compare the paths before the transaction is papered. Final legal documents, elections, and tax-return positions remain with the owner's attorney and CPA.
Primary sources reviewed
- IRS Publication 4681: Canceled Debts, Foreclosures, Repossessions, and Abandonments
- IRS Form 982 and current product information
- Internal Revenue Code Section 108
- IRS Topic 432: Forms 1099-A and 1099-C
Sources were reviewed July 15, 2026. This briefing is educational and does not replace transaction-specific legal, tax, valuation, or bankruptcy advice.