Investors navigating a 1031 exchange face a critical decision under tight deadlines. Can they trust the DST recommendations they're receiving? With substantial capital at stake and limited time, distinguishing between objective guidance and commission-driven sales pitches becomes essential. Understanding how advisors are compensated and what standards govern their recommendations can mean the difference between a sound investment and costly regret.
Delaware Statutory Trusts (DSTs) have gained popularity among investors who want to utilize DSTs as their choice for replacement property in 1031 exchanges. The DSTs provide investors an opportunity to avoid capital gains tax by moving from active real estate investment to passive investment. Nevertheless, it is important to understand that there are various kinds of financial intermediaries who trade DST products in the DST marketplace, and each of them operates using a different pay structure.
Three main types of professionals operate in this space:
Advisors manage wealth holistically and typically provide ongoing portfolio management. Fiduciary duty legally obligates them to act in a client's best financial interest at all times.
Brokers hold licenses to sell DST private placement securities and act as intermediaries between investors and DST sponsors. They operate under FINRA and SEC Regulation Best Interest, putting client interests first during transactions with a less stringent standard than full fiduciary duty.
Consultants specialize in replacing active real estate with passive DSTs and often operate as fee-only professionals who follow strict fiduciary standards, serving as objective advocates.
The distinctions between these roles matter significantly when evaluating advice. An investor working with a fiduciary receives recommendations that must legally prioritize their interests, while someone working with a broker operating under a suitability standard may receive advice that meets minimum thresholds without achieving optimal results.
Compensation models create varying incentives that can influence the recommendations investors receive. Recognizing these potential conflicts helps investors ask better questions and make more informed decisions about whom to trust with significant capital.
There are some professionals who provide DST investment advice but are not paid flat fee for their advice. On the contrary, these professionals operate as brokers for different sponsors of real estate and earn their commission through sale of financial products.
Under such an arrangement, the payment is made not by the client but from the provider of that product itself. This kind of arrangement can result in a bias in favor of high commission products as opposed to those that are suitable for the clients.
Other than up-front commissions, DST products may come with other fees, which lower the net gains to investors. Investment vehicles could incorporate mark-ups, sales loads, and surrender charges that may not be readily detectable by investors. The compounding of such fees may result in loss of some of the benefits of deferring taxes that DST products provided at the outset.
Where the compensation is based on such investment vehicles, it becomes very difficult to ascertain whether investors get sound advice or advice that favors the income of the advisers. The worry about paying more than what should be paid because of the compensation structure is very understandable.
Suitability standard and fiduciary standard are completely distinct concepts. In accordance with the former one applicable to brokers, recommendations should correspond to investor's profile at the moment of sale. An investment should satisfy certain requirements considering client's financial state, but the chosen product does not have to be the optimal one.
The gap opens possibilities for conflict of interests since the broker can offer DST with higher fees without violating the suitability standard. People looking for professional advice would greatly benefit from knowing the difference.
The fiduciary standard offers a solution to the conflicts inherent in commission-based models. Professionals face legal obligations that align their interests directly with client outcomes, creating a foundation for trustworthy advice.
A fee-only fiduciary is a financial professional whose legal obligation requires them to act in a client's best interest and who receives compensation solely from direct client fees, never from commissions on products sold. The compensation structure eliminates the incentive to recommend one investment over another based on advisor compensation.
Fee-only professionals typically charge hourly rates, flat fees or assets-under-management fees that grow only when client wealth grows. The SEC defines this relationship through duty of care and duty of loyalty requirements that obligate advisors to prioritize client interests above their own.
Firms like Sera Capital exemplify this fee-only wealth advisory model, focusing specifically on tax-efficient exit planning for high-net-worth real estate investors. Operating without commissions or product affiliations, these advisors can evaluate DST opportunities objectively across multiple sponsors, selecting options based purely on investment merit.
The advantages of fee-only fiduciary relationships go beyond merely being compensated in a certain way. Increased transparency is achieved when the fee-only model is used because the customer is provided with an explanation about costs and can better compare advisory fees among different advisors. Recommendations will also be more objective since different commissions or incentives of certain DST sponsors have no bearing on them.
Increased transparency brings about a partnership between the advisor and the client. Since the client pays for the services of the advisor directly or in relation to his portfolio, the financial success of the advisor will be completely dependent on the client.
With increased gains for the client comes increased profit for the advisor, while the poor performance of investments negatively affects the advisor's income.
Investors can take concrete steps to evaluate potential advisors and distinguish between professionals operating under different standards. Asking direct questions and assessing specialization helps identify advisors worthy of trust.
Four essential questions should guide any initial conversation with a DST advisor:
"Are you a fiduciary?": Establishes whether the professional operates under the highest care standard
"How are you compensated?": Reveals potential conflicts of interest and helps investors understand what incentives might influence recommendations
"What are all the fees associated with this investment?": Ensures transparency about both advisor compensation and product costs
"What are your potential conflicts of interest?": Gives advisors an opportunity to disclose relationships or arrangements that might affect their objectivity
These questions expose subtle influences and conflicts of interest that may impair professional judgment, and that may not be immediately apparent. Advisors operating with integrity will answer these questions directly and completely. Evasive responses or reluctance to discuss compensation models should raise immediate concerns for investors managing exchange proceeds.
Beyond compensation structure, deep specialization in DSTs and 1031 exchanges provides additional assurance. A true expert does not merely sell DST products as one option among many but provides comprehensive exit planning and tax strategy specific to real estate investors. Specialists understand the nuances of different DST structures, know which sponsors have strong track records, and can evaluate properties based on market conditions and investment fundamentals rather than sales materials.
Sera Capital represents this level of specialization, with DSTs and 721 UPREIT exchanges representing more than 90% of its advisory work. This depth of focus ensures advisors remain current on regulatory changes, market developments and sponsor performance, providing clients with insights that generalist advisors cannot match.
When evaluating potential advisors, investors should ask how much a practice focuses on DST investments and what experience it has guiding clients through exchanges of a similar scale and complexity.
Investors have every right to demand a higher standard of care and transparency when making significant investment decisions under time constraints. Understanding the distinction between suitability and fiduciary obligations, recognizing how compensation models create potential conflicts, and asking direct questions about fees and expertise empowers investors to make confident decisions. For investors questioning the recommendations they have received, seeking a second opinion from a fee-only specialist offers clarity and confidence during a critical financial transition.