1. What International Real Estate Investment Is and Whether Foreigners Can Buy
International real estate investment, in the U.S. .ontext, is the purchase, ownership, operation, and sale of American property by foreign individuals, companies, or investment funds. The threshold question most investors ask is whether they are even allowed to buy. The bigger question is how to buy in a way that limits tax and legal risk.
There is usually no citizenship requirement to own U.S. .eal estate, but that is only the starting point. The structure and planning around the purchase matter far more than eligibility.
What Is International Real Estate Investment?
International real estate investment is cross-border investment in real property, where a foreign person or entity acquires U.S. .eal estate for use, rental income, or long-term gain. It spans homes, rental properties, commercial buildings, and development projects.
The legal work is what separates a smooth investment from a costly one. Taxes, ownership structure, financing, and national security screening all apply differently to foreign investors. Many of these deals involve foreign direct investment considerations from the outset.
Can Foreigners Buy U.S. Real Estate?
Yes, foreign investors can generally buy U.S. .eal estate, as most property ownership does not require citizenship or residency. However, some restrictions apply, and they are expanding in certain areas.
State restrictions often focus on agricultural land, foreign-adversary ownership, or property near sensitive infrastructure, and they vary sharply by state. Because these laws have been changing, confirm the current restrictions where the property sits before making an offer.
2. Ownership Structures and Tax Planning
The two decisions that most affect a foreign investor's outcome are how to hold the property and how it will be taxed. Both should be settled before closing, not after. A structure that looks simple can create heavy tax, liability, or estate problems later.
Tax is where foreign investors are most often surprised, especially at sale. Planning early is far cheaper than fixing it at closing.
How Should a Foreign Investor Hold U.S. Real Estate?
It depends on your goals, because the choice between individual ownership, an LLC, a corporation, a partnership, a trust, or a fund vehicle affects liability, tax, privacy, financing, and succession. No single structure is right for everyone.
| Structure | Often Used for | Key Consideration |
|---|---|---|
| Individual name | Simple single purchases | Liability and estate-tax exposure |
| LLC | Liability protection, privacy | Flexible, common for rentals |
| Corporation | Blocking estate tax, privacy | Corporate tax and withholding layers |
| Trust | Succession and estate planning | Coordinated with home-country rules |
| Fund vehicle | Multiple investors, larger deals | More complex compliance |
Corporate blocker structures may reduce direct estate-tax exposure but can create corporate-level tax, dividend withholding, branch-profits-tax, and treaty-analysis issues to review. Structuring is often coordinated with financing through commercial real estate finance and, for pooled capital, a real estate investment trusts or fund approach.
What Taxes Apply, Including Firpta and Estate Tax?
Foreign investors face tax on rental income, capital gains on sale, and potentially U.S. .state tax, and tax treaties may modify these. Rental income is generally taxable, with elections and withholding that affect whether it is taxed on a net or gross basis.
At sale, the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act, or FIRPTA, applies. FIRPTA treats a foreign person's disposition of a U.S. .eal property interest as taxable and generally requires the buyer to withhold from the amount realized, commonly at 15 percent, under Internal Revenue Code sections 897 and 1445, though rates and rules change and should be confirmed. U.S. .eal estate owned directly by a nonresident alien can also be U.S.-situs property for estate-tax purposes, often with a much lower exemption than U.S. .ersons receive, and Form 706-NA may be required for nonresident alien decedents, which is why estate planning matters.
3. National Security Review and Money-Laundering Rules
Two areas surprise many foreign real estate investors: national security screening and anti-money-laundering compliance. Both can apply even to ordinary-looking purchases. Ignoring them can delay or unwind a deal.
These are among the strongest reasons to get legal review before signing. A problem caught early is far easier to solve.
Can Cfius Review a Foreign Real Estate Purchase?
CFIUS does not review every foreign real estate purchase, but the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States can review covered real estate transactions involving foreign persons, and the President can suspend or prohibit a deal on national security grounds. Risk is highest for property near listed military installations, certain airports, maritime ports, critical infrastructure, or sensitive technology operations.
The list of covered sites was expanded by a 2024 rule, so proximity should be screened before signing. Foreign investors facing possible exposure often seek CFIUS compliance analysis early. Because the covered areas change, confirm the current scope.
What Aml and Source-of-Funds Rules Apply?
Anti-money-laundering rules increasingly reach real estate, so foreign buyers should expect requests for source-of-funds and beneficial ownership information. Banks and closing agents must verify where the money comes from and who ultimately owns a purchasing entity.
Federal real estate reporting rules now require certain non-financed residential real estate transfers to legal entities or trusts to be reported to FinCEN, subject to exemptions and transaction-specific analysis. Direct individual buyers are generally outside that reporting, but entity and trust purchases are a focus. Preparing documentation in advance, with help on anti-money-laundering compliance, keeps a purchase from stalling.
4. Buying, Operating, Selling, and Getting Help
Beyond structure and compliance, a foreign investor moves through the same lifecycle as any owner: buy, operate, and eventually sell or pass on the property. Each stage has its own documents and risks. Coordinating them is where legal help pays off.
The exit and succession stages deserve as much planning as the purchase. Surprises there are the most expensive.
How Do the Purchase, Closing, and Operation Work?
The purchase typically moves from a letter of intent to a purchase agreement, followed by title search, due diligence, escrow, financing, and closing. A clear purchase agreement and clean title are the foundation of a safe deal, and cross-border buyers often handle this through commercial and residential real estate counsel.
Foreign investors should also plan for lender KYC, source-of-funds review, currency transfer timing, guarantees, U.S. .ank-account setup, and tax-identification requirements before closing. Once the investor owns the property, leasing requires a solid commercial lease agreement or residential lease, plus property management and local compliance, while development adds zoning, land use, environmental review, and permits.
What about Selling, Succession, and When to Call a Lawyer?
When a foreign investor sells, FIRPTA withholding applies, and the seller can often apply for a withholding certificate to reduce over-withholding, so this should be planned before the sale, not discovered at closing. The buyer, not only the seller, should review FIRPTA early, because the buyer may be the withholding agent and can face liability if required withholding is missed.
Succession is the other overlooked risk: if a foreign owner dies holding U.S. .eal estate directly, probate, ancillary probate, and estate tax can follow, which planning can reduce. Because the stakes are high and the rules span tax, securities, and national security law, contacting a lawyer early, especially for a large, all-cash, entity-owned, or near-sensitive-site purchase, is one of the best ways to protect the investment.
5. International Real Estate Investment: Common Questions for Foreign Investors
Foreign investors often have practical questions about buying, owning, and selling U.S. .roperty. These quick answers cover eligibility, structure, taxes, FIRPTA, CFIUS, and compliance.
Can Foreigners Invest in U.S. Real Estate?
Yes. Foreign individuals, companies, and funds can generally invest in U.S. .eal estate without citizenship or residency. Some states restrict foreign ownership of farmland or foreign-adversary ownership, and property near military or sensitive sites may face federal review, so restrictions should be checked before buying where the property is located.
Should a Foreign Investor Buy U.S. Property through an Llc?
Often, but it depends. An LLC can offer liability protection and privacy and is common for rentals, but the best structure depends on tax, estate, financing, and privacy goals. Some investors use corporations or trusts to manage estate-tax or succession exposure, so structuring should be planned before closing.
Is Buying U.S. Real Estate through a Foreign Company a Good Idea?
It can help with privacy, succession, or estate-tax planning, but it can also create U.S. .orporate tax, withholding, financing, treaty, and compliance issues. The right structure depends on the investor's tax residence, home-country rules, financing plan, rental use, and exit strategy, so it should be reviewed before buying.
What Is Firpta Withholding, and Can It Be Reduced?
FIRPTA is the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act, which taxes a foreign person's sale of U.S. .eal estate and generally requires the buyer to withhold a portion of the amount realized, commonly 15 percent. A foreign seller can apply to the IRS for a withholding certificate when the required withholding exceeds the actual tax owed, so plan early.
How Is U.S. Rental Income Taxed for Foreign Investors?
U.S. .ental income earned by foreign investors is generally taxable, and how it is taxed depends on elections and withholding rules. Investors can often elect to be taxed on a net basis after deductions rather than facing gross withholding. State taxes and local rules may also apply, so review this before leasing.
Does Every Foreign Real Estate Purchase Require Cfius Review?
No. CFIUS review applies only to covered transactions. Risk is higher for property near listed military installations, airports, maritime ports, critical infrastructure, or sensitive technology operations. The site and investor profile should be screened before signing, because coverage has expanded and continues to change.
What Happens If a Foreign Owner Dies Owning U.S. Real Estate?
If a foreign owner dies holding U.S. .eal estate directly, it can trigger U.S. .robate, ancillary probate, and estate tax, often with a lower exemption than for U.S. .ersons, and Form 706-NA may be required. Estate planning, sometimes using trusts or entities, can reduce delays and tax exposure.
19 Dec, 2025

