The U.S. real estate market has long operated under a patchwork of anti‑money‑laundering (AML) oversight mechanisms falling under the governance of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) of the U.S. Department of Treasury. Currently, FinCEN uses Geographic Targeting Orders (GTOs) to require title insurance companies in select metropolitan areas to report certain all‑cash residential real estate purchases made through legal entities. These GTOs mandate the disclosure of beneficial owners behind opaque corporate structures to help identify illicit financial activity. While the new nationwide rule has been on hold, FinCEN has emphasized that these preceding GTOs remained in effect. However, this GTO system is limited in scope, applying to specific counties and select transaction types.

What is Changing on March 1?

FinCEN originally scheduled the finalized nationwide Residential Real Estate (RRE) Reporting Rule to take effect in 2025, but in the fall of 2025 postponed implementation to March 1, 2026. After March 1, the rule enforces a uniform national reporting requirement for certain non‑financed transfers of U.S. residential real property when the transferee is an entity or trust.

According to FinCEN, the new rule requires reporting when all of the following conditions are met:

  1. The property is residential real estate: Including single‑family homes, condos, co‑ops, townhomes, 1–4-unit buildings, mixed‑use properties with a residential component, and vacant land intended for 1–4‑unit residential construction.
  2. The transfer is non‑financed: Meaning no credit is extended by a financial institution subject to AML and Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) obligations. Private lender financing still counts as non‑financing under the finalized rule.
  3. The transferee is a legal entity or trust: Including LLCs, corporations, partnerships, and both domestic and foreign trusts.
  4. No exemption applies: Exemptions include transfers resulting from death, divorce, court supervision, certain exchanges under the purview of §1030 of the IRC, gifts, and transfers to individuals. More details on exceptions to this reporting rule can be found here on the FinCEN.gov website.

Note: Many property transfers that impact DRL clients involve probate, the terms of a will or trust, or a similar contractual provision. In most cases, these transactions will fall within an exemption; however, it is essential to speak with an attorney to confirm that the exemption applies.

FinCEN’s finalized rule significantly broadens oversight and eliminates any monetary threshold, meaning even low‑value transactions must be reported if they meet the criteria.

The required Real Estate Report will include:

  • Identifying information for transferee entities or trusts
  • Beneficial owners of each transferee
  • Information on signing individuals and transferors
  • Details of consideration and payment methods

Why is This Rule Change Happening?

FinCEN cites heightened vulnerabilities in the all‑cash residential real estate market, noting that anonymous entity‑based purchases have been widely used to launder money, evade sanctions, and hide proceeds of corruption. The nationwide rule aims to close regulatory gaps and ensure consistent AML protections across the country.

The agency postponed the compliance date to reduce the administrative burden, allow the industry more time to prepare, and support effective implementation while still advancing national security interests.

Who Files the Report?

FinCEN identifies “reportable transfers” that paradoxically may still avoid the requirement to report. Avoiding reporting is only possible if the transfer does not involve:

  1. A closing or settlement agent on the closing or settlement statement;
  2. A person that prepares the closing or settlement statement;
  3. A person who files the deed or other conveyance instrument for recording;
  4. An underwriter on an owner’s insurance policy for the transferee (such as a title insurance agency);
  5. A disbursement of funds from an escrow, trust, or lawyers’ trust account in connection with the transfer, in which case the greatest disbursement incurs reporting responsibility;
  6. An evaluation of the status of the title; or
  7. A person that prepares the deed or other conveyance instrument.

It’s difficult to imagine a valid transfer of residential real estate that does not have at least one of the above occurrences, but such transfer escapes reporting requirements. If you or a person in your organization performs any one of the above, then the reporting responsibility attaches to the task. Parties may enter agreements to shift the reporting responsibility.

In Practice

Beginning March 1, 2026, organizations, professionals, and individuals involved in residential real estate transactions must satisfy the more rigorous reporting responsibilities. FinCEN provides a fillable form to alleviate difficulty or confusion in submitting the required report. Failure to comply may incur civil and criminal penalties. The real estate attorneys at Doré Rothberg Law, P.C. are prepared to ensure compliance with the new rule and provide guidance in making benefit-maximizing decisions while estate planning or during other property transactions. Remember, each of the 4 conditions outlined above must be satisfied before a report must be filed for a given residential real estate transaction under the new rule. If you want to confirm your status, give us a call at 281-829-1555 or reach out via www.dorelaw.com.

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