Several local notaries are now taking the view that they can close deals with no RFC
or CURP from the sellers, yet still take standard deductions for those
sellers against any cap gains.This elevates the risk of a Hacienda
audit of the sale, but assuming everything was handled legally, which of
course it would be, there would ultimately be nothing lost, except the
hassle of dealing with the possible audit, with deductions for things
like major improvements scrutinized.
We
have another notary that has now also changed from the strict interpretation
to a much less cumbersome one, but on a different basis; that is,
specifically, that they can generate automatically a generic RFC for sellers, which will technically satisfy SAT Hacienda and allow the notary to close.
However,
other attorneys dispute the legality and efficacy of this generic RFC approach outright.
They say it makes more sense to just close without an RFC at all for the
sellers.
Caveat:
Until
more time passes and we arrive at a broader consensus, there is a real
chance that your buyer might be advised by his attorney or notary that
regardless of what
the more flexible notaries now say, the buyer should avoid any and all risk of losing his or her cost basis,
and therefore should insist, as a condition of his or her offer, on you obtaining
the full temporary residency, CURP, and RFC from SAT, etc. just to be on
the safe side.
In
other words, just because we have some notaries now taking the more
lenient position, that doesn't guarantee your buyer will go along with
it.
But,
I am guardedly optimistic. My sense is that the consensus will gather momentum; more and more attorneys and notaries will come around
to these more flexible positions. The more strict interpretation is
just too draconian and damaging to the market.
Robert
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