When a Central Valley family exchanges farmland for replacement property somewhere with no state income tax — Nevada, Texas, Florida — there's a quiet assumption that often goes unspoken: that California is now in the rear-view mirror. It isn't. Form 3840 is how California keeps that memory on the record.
This isn't a reason to avoid an out-of-state exchange. For some families it's still the right path forward. But it's a real obligation, with real consequences for the people who inherit the land, and it deserves to be understood before the deal closes — not discovered years later by a successor trustee.
First, the term "clawback"
You'll hear advisors and articles use it. It's shorthand, not a statute. There's no moment where California reaches into a Nevada bank account and pulls money back. What actually exists is a deferred tax obligation that California continues to track — and a filing requirement that keeps it alive on the books until the gain is finally recognized or otherwise resolved. The "clawback" is really a come-due date that the family often chooses without realizing they've chosen it.
The mechanics, in plain language
A 1031 exchange (named for the section of the tax code that allows it) lets you defer — not erase — the capital gains tax when you sell investment property and reinvest the proceeds into "like-kind" replacement property. Defer is the operative word. The tax doesn't disappear; it rides along into the new property's cost basis, waiting.
Here's where California diverges from most states. When you sell California property at a gain and exchange into property outside California, the state still considers that deferred gain to be California-source income. It will be owed to California whenever the replacement property is eventually sold in a taxable transaction — even if, by then, the family has lived in Texas for fifteen years.
To keep that obligation visible, California requires Form 3840 — the California Like-Kind Exchanges report. It must be filed for the tax year of the exchange, and then filed again every year thereafter, for as long as the deferred gain remains unrecognized. One exchange in 2026 can generate a 3840 filing obligation in 2027, 2031, 2040, and beyond. Each annual form tells the FTB the same thing: the deferred California gain is still out there, and here's where it lives now.
An exchange is a single event. The obligation it creates is a decades-long relationship with the Franchise Tax Board.
Why this matters more for farmland
Farmland transitions are generational by nature. The whole point of much of this planning is to hold property across decades and hand it down. That long horizon is exactly what makes the 3840 obligation easy to lose.
Consider the realistic failure mode. A family exchanges Tulare County row-crop ground into a Nevada property in 2026. The CPA who handled the exchange files the first 3840 cleanly. Two years later that CPA retires. The family changes preparers. The new preparer, focused on a now-Nevada-resident family, has no reason to know a dormant California filing obligation exists. The annual 3840 quietly stops being filed.
When that reporting lapses, the FTB's stated position is that it may issue a Notice of Proposed Assessment — estimating the deferred income and assessing the California tax, plus penalties and interest — even though the family hasn't sold the replacement property and is still deferring for federal purposes. This isn't hypothetical: the FTB has run active compliance efforts, mailing letters to taxpayers it identified as having a 3840 obligation. That assessment can land on the original taxpayer, or on the estate and heirs who inherited a property they didn't know carried a California string attached to it.
When the obligation actually ends
The annual filing isn't truly perpetual. Per the FTB's guidance, it ends when one of three things happens:
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1
Recognition. The deferred California gain is finally recognized on a California return — typically when the replacement property is sold in a taxable transaction.
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2
Inheritance. The property passes through inheritance, which the FTB treats as eliminating the deferred California-source gain — the same event that resets cost basis at death for federal purposes.
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3
Donation. The replacement property is donated to a qualifying nonprofit organization.
That second off-ramp is why generational planning and the 3840 obligation are so tightly linked. For a family whose plan is to hold the ground and pass it to the next generation, inheritance is a defined exit from the obligation — if the property is titled and transferred in a way that qualifies. That "if" is the whole game. It's exactly where the estate documents and the titling decisions made today determine whether heirs walk into a clean inheritance or an accelerated tax bill. We don't make assurances about any individual outcome; we coordinate with your CPA and estate attorney so the path to that off-ramp is actually built, not assumed.
One trap worth naming directly: a second 1031 exchange does not end the obligation. If the out-of-state replacement property is later exchanged again in another deferred exchange, the California reporting requirement continues, because the deferral continues. Families who assume a fresh exchange wipes the slate are mistaken — the California string follows the gain.
The trade-offs, named plainly
An out-of-state 1031 exchange can be the right move. Replacement property in a no-income-tax state can improve a family's cash-flow position, diversify away from a single piece of ground, and ease a transition for heirs who don't want to farm. None of that goes away because of Form 3840. What the 3840 changes is the administrative and inheritance picture.
What Form 3840 actually costs you
It doesn't time out on its own. Someone has to file every year — possibly for decades — until recognition, inheritance, or donation closes it out.
The most common way families get hurt isn't a bad strategy — it's a filing that falls through the cracks during a CPA change, a move, or the settling of an estate.
Until inheritance closes the obligation, the annual tracking can land on heirs and successor trustees. If the planning didn't account for that, the surprise lands on the next generation.
At California's top rate of 13.3%, a large deferred gain represents a substantial liability accruing quietly in the background. Illustrative, not a projection of any specific family's outcome — but the right order of magnitude to take seriously.
What "keep the farm" looks like here
Worth saying directly: the simplest way to never file a Form 3840 is to not do an out-of-state exchange in the first place. For families whose goal is to keep the ground in the family and keep it working, an out-of-state 1031 may not serve the actual objective at all. The 3840 question is one input among several — it shouldn't drive the decision by itself, but it shouldn't be discovered after the decision either.
How we coordinate this
We don't prepare tax returns and we don't file Form 3840 — that's your CPA's work, and we coordinate with them rather than around them. What we do is make sure the 3840 obligation is on the table before an exchange is structured, that the annual filing responsibility is assigned to someone in writing, and that the inheritance implications are built into the estate documents rather than left for heirs to stumble into. The role is quarterback, not transaction broker: keeping the obligation visible across the decades and the people who will eventually carry it.
Legacy Land Advisory
Already done an out-of-state exchange — and not sure the 3840 has been filed every year since?
That's a conversation worth having before the next tax season, not after a notice arrives. We help Central Valley families coordinate the people and the paperwork so an exchange done years ago doesn't become a surprise for the next generation.
Start the ConversationCommon Questions
FTB Form 3840 —
What Families Ask
What is FTB Form 3840?
FTB Form 3840 is California's Like-Kind Exchanges report. It is required whenever a California property is exchanged in a 1031 transaction for replacement property located outside California. The form must be filed for the year of the exchange and every year thereafter until the deferred gain is recognized, the property is inherited, or the property is donated to a qualifying nonprofit.
Does the Form 3840 requirement apply even if I move out of California?
Yes. California considers the deferred gain on a California property to be California-source income, regardless of where the replacement property is located or where the taxpayer subsequently lives. Even if a family moves to Nevada, Texas, or Florida after the exchange, the annual Form 3840 filing obligation remains until a defined ending event occurs.
Does a second 1031 exchange of the out-of-state property end the obligation?
No. If the out-of-state replacement property is later exchanged into another property through a second 1031 exchange, the California reporting requirement continues because the deferral continues. The California string follows the gain, not the specific property. The obligation ends only upon recognition, inheritance, or qualifying donation.
What happens if Form 3840 is not filed every year?
If the annual Form 3840 filing lapses, the FTB may issue a Notice of Proposed Assessment — estimating the deferred income and assessing California tax, plus penalties and interest — even though the replacement property has not been sold. This assessment can fall on the original taxpayer or on heirs and successor trustees who inherited the property without knowing about the underlying filing obligation.
Does inheritance end the Form 3840 obligation?
Per FTB guidance, inheritance is a defined ending event for the annual Form 3840 filing obligation — the same event that resets cost basis at death for federal purposes. However, whether the property is titled and transferred in a way that qualifies requires coordination with a CPA and estate attorney. How the estate documents and titling are structured today determines whether heirs walk into a clean inheritance or a surprise tax bill.
Important Disclosures
This article is educational and does not constitute tax, legal, or investment advice. California tax treatment of like-kind exchanges is complex, FTB guidance and individual circumstances vary, and the inheritance treatment described depends on how property is titled and transferred. Coordinate with a qualified tax professional and estate attorney regarding Form 3840 and your specific situation.
Regulatory Disclosure: Avidity Capital Inc. is a California state-registered investment adviser (CRD# 312745). Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training. For firm background information, visit adviserinfo.sec.gov/firm/summary/312745.
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