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New IRS Safe Harbors for Publicly-Financed Properties Help Hotel Industry

The IRS recently issued new guidance on safe harbor provisions in management contracts for publicly-owned, bond-financed properties. These safe harbor provisions affect a variety of real estate assets including hotels and other privately managed public properties.

On August 22, 2016, the IRS issued Revenue Procedure 2016-44, which provides new guidance on safe harbor provisions for management contracts for properties financed with tax-free government bonds. The new regulations loosen requirements under the previous guidance in Revenue Procedure 1997-13, as amended. These new regulations will have a large impact on publicly-financed hotels, which are commonly operated under management contracts by popular hotel brands.

Background

Many municipalities look to finance the construction of public projects with bonds. These government bonds are tax-exempt to the bondholders because the project serves a public purpose and is owned by a qualified user (depending on the project, either a governmental entity or a 501(c)(3) organization). However, owners of these public projects usually retain private management companies to operate them under “qualified management agreements.”

Hotels are often publicly-owned and funded through bond sales to serve other nearby public facilities like airports, convention centers, and stadiums. Many hotels are operated by branded managers under management contracts. For an example of the structure of a manager-managed hotel, see Branded Hotel Management Arrangement Chart.

When a hotel is publicly-owned and financed, it must meet specific IRS requirements so that use of the property is not a private business use (including the management company profiting from the property). A private business use causes the bonds to be taxable. These IRS requirements make negotiation of the hotel management agreement more challenging. Historically, limits on the length of contracts, type of compensation structure, operations, and uses of the property have caused hotel managers to enter into arrangements that vary considerably from what is customary in the hospitality industry. Hotel managers abandoned traditional management agreement terms, such as incentive fee compensation and renewal options, in order to meet IRS guidelines.

The IRS established new safe harbor provisions to provide greater guidance on structuring management contracts to prevent a private business use or other taxable event. The provisions cover important aspects of management contracts including management fees, operating terms, and affiliate contracts.

Rev. Proc. 2016-44 Safe Harbor Provisions and Requirements

The new revenue procedure describes several conditions that, if met by the terms of a management contract, the manager’s role under the management contract is not considered a private business use of publicly-financed property:

Effective Date

The new safe harbor provisions apply to management contracts entered into on or after August 22, 2016. Issuers and borrowers can elect to apply the new provisions to contracts entered into before August 22, 2016. Issuers and borrowers may also elect to apply the prior safe harbor requirements for management contracts entered into before February 18, 2017.

Practical Implications

The new IRS safe harbor provisions are significant because they represent a relaxed posture towards the use of publicly-issued bonds to finance public projects. The new rules allow for:

The new revenue procedure will also affect 501(c)(3) charitable organizations, hospitals, public housing, schools, public private partnerships, and various other privately managed organizations funded with government bonds.
Counsel should review, and consider modifying, all management contracts for bond-financed properties to take advantage of the new regulations.

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Practical Law Real Estate offers hotel owners and developers, and their counsel, a variety of resources related to hotel property transactions:

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