For the retiring medical professional, the sale of a practice is the culmination of a life’s work. Yet, without proactive Tax Architecture, nearly half of that legacy can be eroded by federal capital gains, state taxes, and depreciation recapture.
In the 2026 tax landscape, following the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), the strategy for a tax-efficient exit has shifted toward maximizing Principal value through structural engineering. If you are within 24 months of retirement, these are the high-impact moves required to crush the tax bite and preserve your equity.
1. Structural Engineering: Asset vs. Stock Sale
The most critical decision happens before the first Letter of Intent (LOI) is signed.
- Asset Sale (Buyer Preferred): Buyers typically demand an asset sale to “step up” the tax basis of your equipment and real estate, allowing them to accelerate depreciation and reduce their future taxable income. For you, this triggers ordinary income rates on “recaptured” depreciation—often the most expensive tax category.
- Stock Sale (Seller Preferred): You sell the entity itself, which generally results in Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) rates (typically 15% or 20%).
Advanced Strategy: Use a “Section 338(h)(10) Election” to recharacterize a stock purchase as an asset purchase for federal tax purposes only. This allows the buyer to enjoy the step-up in basis while the seller can often negotiate a higher purchase price to offset the additional tax burden from depreciation recapture.
2. The 100% Tax Exclusion: Section 1202 (QSBS)
If your medical practice is structured as a C-Corp, you may qualify for the Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) exclusion.
- The Benefit: Under the OBBBA, the aggregate gross asset threshold for QSBS has increased to $75 million (indexed for inflation after 2026).
- The Tiered Exclusion: For stock acquired after July 4, 2025, you can exclude 50% of gain after 3 years, 75% after 4 years, and 100% after 5 years, with the per-issuer cap increased to the greater of $15 million or 10x your basis.
- The “Health” Hurdle: While “health services” are generally disqualified, businesses focusing on diagnostic technology or specialized lab testing where the physician is not the sole source of value may still qualify.
- Doubling the Cap: Section 1202 is a per-taxpayer exclusion. If both a husband and wife hold stock individually, they can effectively double their protection to $30 million ($15 million each) on a joint return.
- Note: For those filing Married Filing Separately (MFS), the cap is legally halved to $7.5 million per spouse.
3. The 1042 Rollover: The ESOP Advantage
For medical practice owners looking to preserve their legacy and reward their staff, selling to an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) offers one of the most powerful tax-deferral tools in the code: the Section 1042 Rollover.
- The Tax-Free Exit: Under Section 1042, you can defer 100% of capital gains taxes on the sale of your stock to an ESOP. This transforms a taxable sale into a tax-deferred investment vehicle.
- The Requirements:
- Your practice must be a C-Corporation at the time of the sale (or convert from an S-Corp prior to closing).
- The ESOP must own at least 30% of the company stock immediately after the sale.
- You must have held the stock for at least three years.
- Qualified Replacement Property (QRP): To maintain the deferral, you must reinvest the sale proceeds into QRP—typically stocks or bonds of U.S. operating companies—within a 15-month window.
- Eliminating Tax Entirely: If you hold your QRP until death, your heirs receive a step-up in basis, effectively wiping out the deferred capital gains tax forever.
4. Deferral via Structured Installment Sales
Receiving a multi-million dollar lump sum in one year can trigger the highest tax brackets and the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT).
- The Strategy: Use an installment sale under Section 453 to receive payments over 10–30 years.
- The Result: You recognize gain proportionally with each payment, keeping you in lower tax brackets and allowing the unpaid portion of the sale price to earn interest and compound tax-deferred.
Bonus Strategy: The Charitable “Bypass” (CRT)
For the philanthropically minded, a Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT) is a premier vehicle for a practice exit.
- The Mechanics: You transfer appreciated practice equity or real estate into the irrevocable trust before the sale.
- The Advantage: The CRT sells the assets tax-free, reinvesting the full proceeds to pay you an income stream for life or a set term (up to 20 years). You also receive an immediate partial income tax deduction for the “remainder interest” that will eventually go to charity.
The Next Move: Your Exit Architecture Audit
A successful medical practice exit isn’t measured by the sale price—it’s measured by the Net Enterprise Value you take home. If you are planning to retire in the next 12–24 months, let’s build your transition plan before you engage a buyer.
- Entity Conversion Analysis: We can evaluate if a C-Corp conversion is necessary to turn on Section 1042 or Section 1202 eligibility.
- Pre-Sale Deduction Strategy: Let’s maximize high-impact retirement contributions like Cash Balance plans during your peak earning years before the exit.
- Strategic RFP Support: We help you vet potential buyers (Private Equity vs. ESOP) to ensure the deal structure aligns with your tax-efficiency goals.

About the Author
Michael R. Arrache, CPA & Realtor®
As a Certified Public Accountant (CPA), Enrolled Agent (EA), and licensed Realtor®, Michael is a tax and real estate strategist who specializes in the intersection of business ownership and property investment. His firm, Arrache Private Client, provides high-level tax architecture, CFO consulting, and Real Estate strategies for real estate and business owners looking to increase profits and grow their wealth.
With over 15 years of experience, Michael’s mission is to move clients from passive earners to strategic principals in their own financial lives. These publications serve as a guide through the complexities of business and real estate, offering the tailored solutions and strategic oversight needed to secure a multi-generational legacy.

