Achieving anonymity in a real estate transaction in Texas is difficult -- maybe next to impossible if you finance the purchase – for several reasons.
To have any hope of remaining anonymous, you must create an entity such as a limited liability company. Obviously, if you hold title in your name, you cannot be anonymous.
Unlike some states, Texas does not allow the creation of anonymous entities. The document filed to create an entity requires the names of the managers or directors, or, if the entity is member or shareholder managed, the names of the members or shareholders.
After the entity is created an annual Public Information Report must be filed listing the name and address of each officer, director, member, general partner, or manager.
If you are purchasing a one-to-four unit residential property and financing a portion of the purchase price, most lenders will not loan to an entity. They will require you to purchase in your name. You can transfer the property into your entity after closing, but that will leave a trail in the real estate records. Those records are open to the public. The transfer of title from you to your entity will be immediately available to anyone who cares to look for it.
Virtually all mortgages have a provision in them which prohibits the transfer of title to the mortgaged property without approval from the lender. Very few, if any, lenders will approve a transfer. If you transfer without written approval, it will violate the terms of your mortgage and subject the loan to being called due. It is rare for a lender to call a performing loan due because it was transferred to an entity owned and controlled by its borrower for asset protection purposes, but it could happen.
In 2019 the Congress passed the Corporate Transparency Act, and the Treasury Department financial crimes division (“FinCEN”) is proposing regulations to implement the provisions of the Act.
What those regulations will require is still a moving target, but it will probably require reporting from financial institutions and title companies and perhaps lawyers involved in real estate transactions and in creating entities to report the beneficial owners of real estate and entities to the federal government.
For the reasons stated above, achieving anonymity for a real estate investor is relative, not absolute. To achieve even a modicum of anonymity requires planning, beginning at the contract stage of a purchase, and the willingness to accept additional complexity and expense. It is just not as simple as creating an LLC and deeding property into it.
We will list some techniques which can create a relative degree of anonymity. Each involves additional expense and has advantages and disadvantages.
Remember that Texas requires the formation documents of an entity to list the managers or members and the annual public information report must also report the name and address of each member or manager. Anyone who wants to look beyond the surface can find the owner.
A second LLC manages the property under a management contract. It is the front facing entity and all contracts, leases, etc. are made in the name of this second LLC. The management LLC has little or no assets. This technique further insulates the LLC which owns the real estate because no one interacts with it. Lawyers sometimes call this “privity of contract”. Privity of contract occurs between the parties to a contract. Since the LLC which owns the property is not a party to these contracts, it is further insulated from liability.
Each technique listed above becomes more and more complex to implement and maintain and thus more expensive. No technique can guarantee complete anonymity. However, each technique listed provides more anonymity and can make it difficult and expensive to learn the true owner of real estate.