Monday, June 20, 2016

new 40,071-square-foot conference center coming to Cape Coral

 This week, Cape Coral City Council approved a number of zoning-related amendments to keep plans for a new 40,071-square-foot conference center on track to begin construction soon.

 

Developers of the Westin Resort at Tarpon Point Marina are behind this $12 million project. The new center is projected to create 33 new jobs, bring in $100,000 in bed tax money and provide a total regional benefit of $33.44 million in the first three years.

 

"The conference center will become an important anchor for economic development in our city," says EDO Manager Dana Brunett. "It will be exciting to see the commercial development that will arise from having a conference center in Cape Coral, and it will be nice to be able to bring in business-related visitors to our community as a result of this conference center."

 

In addition to the conference center, the hotel plans to remodel a number of two-bedroom suites into one-bedroom rooms to increase the number of rooms available. 

 

 

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There are still plenty of Florida Vacation Homes  in Cape Coral for great rates available compared to other cities in SW Florida.

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Foreign sellers? FIRPTA withholding increases to 15%

 Foreign sellers? FIRPTA withholding increases to 15%

 

WASHINGTON – Jan. 19, 2016 – Congress recently made changes to the U.S. Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act of 1980 (FIRPTA). While two changes should benefit the real estate community, a third will impact foreign sellers of certain properties.

On the positive side, new FIRPTA rules will make U.S. commercial property more attractive to foreign investors, according to Ralph W. Holmen, associate general counsel for the National Association of Realtors® (NAR). The law doubles the maximum amount of stock ownership a foreign investor may have in a U.S. publicly-traded real estate investment trust (REIT), bumping it up from the current 5 percent to 10 percent. It also permits certain foreign pension funds to invest in real estate investment trusts (REITs) without having FIRPTA treatment apply.

On the other hand, the new FIRPTA rules increase the withholding tax paid by foreign sellers of certain properties effective Feb. 17, 2016.

"The recently enacted Protecting American Taxpayers from Tax Hikes (PATH) Act (H.R. 2029) includes two very positive FIRPTA provisions that are conservatively estimated to boost foreign investment in U.S. commercial real estate by $20-$30 billion per year," writes Holmen. "However, as part of a package of tax changes to 'pay for' the two provisions, Congress also included an increase in the FIRPTA withholding rate from 10 percent to 15 percent."

How new withholding works

The law considers three levels of property purchases: A personal residence of $300,000 or less; a personal residence worth more than $300,000 but less than $1 million; and properties valued at $1 million or more:

  • $300,000: Foreign sellers currently pay no FIRPTA tax, and this doesn't change under the new rule, providing the property will be used as a residence
  • $300,000-$1 million: The current 10 percent FIRPTA tax does not change under the new rule, providing the property will be used as a residence
  • $1 million-plus: The FIRPTA tax goes up from the current 10 percent to 15 percent after Feb. 16. In this $1 million-plus category, it doesn't matter whether the property will be used as a residence or not

What is FIRPTA?

Congress created FIRPTA based on reports that foreign investors were purchasing U.S. real estate and then selling it at a profit without paying any U.S. taxes. Consequently, FIRPTA created a requirement forcing buyers to withhold 10 percent of the purchase price and remit it to the Internal Revenue Service at the time of closing, subject to a few exceptions.

"Usually, the settlement agent is the party that withholds and remits the funds to the IRS, but the buyer is legally responsible," writes Holmen. "In certain circumstances, the buyer's agent can also be held liable."

Florida Realtors contracts

The current version of Florida Realtors/Florida Bar forms and the CRSP-14a FIRPTA addendum contain language that refers to a 10 percent withholding. Since that 10 percent requirement changes for some transactions after Feb. 16, 2016, the association is currently working on changes that reflect the higher 15 percent for $1 million-plus property purchases.

Once forms have been updated, a notice will run in Florida Realtors News announcing the changes.

© 2016 Florida Realtors®  

 

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HAVE YOUR OWN PIECE OF PARADISE!
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floridacapecoralrealestate

 

 

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There are still plenty of Florida Vacation Homes  in Cape Coral for great rates available compared to other cities in SW Florida.