Strategy · 351 ETF Exchange

351 ETF Exchange: the complete guide.

If you have an already diversified taxable portfolio of stocks with significant embedded gains, a 351 ETF Exchange can consolidate it into a single ETF holding without triggering capital gains tax at contribution.

This guide covers what a 351 ETF Exchange is, the 25/50 diversification test that decides whether your portfolio qualifies, how cost basis carries over to the new ETF, and how to think about the strategy alongside other concentrated-stock and tax-management tools.

This guide provides general information rather than personalized investment, tax, or legal advice. The numbers and frameworks describe how the relevant strategies typically work for the broad population of tech employees with concentrated equity, but they cannot account for your specific cost basis, vesting schedule, state of residence, marriage status, charitable intent, estate plan, AMT carryforwards, or holding-period clocks, all of which materially change the answer in any individual case. To run the numbers on your actual situation, talk to an advisor.

Part one.
What a 351 ETF Exchange is and how it works

What a 351 ETF Exchange actually is

A 351 ETF Exchange is a tax-deferred transaction in which investors contribute appreciated securities to a newly formed exchange-traded fund in exchange for ETF shares without recognizing capital gains at the time of contribution. Under Section 351 of the Internal Revenue Code, no gain or loss is recognized.1 The investor's original cost basis and holding period carry over to the new ETF shares.2

This strategy is also sometimes referred to as a 351 ETF Conversion. It emerged as a retail-accessible option around 2022-2024 when specialty ETF issuers began offering coordinated contribution windows.

Here is the mechamism: A new ETF launches with a contribution window open for several weeks. During this window, eligible investors contribute their qualifying portfolios and 'seed' the ETF with their stocks. Once the contribution period closes, the ETF is formed, listed on a public exchange, and begins trading. Contributors then become owners of ETF shares with carryover basis from their original positions.

The 351 ETF Exchange works only for investors whose contributing portfolio is already broadly diversified. Single-stock holders need to address concentration through other strategies.

How the contribution mechanics work

To qualify for tax-deferred treatment under Section 351, investors need to pass two tests.

The first test is called the control test: contributing investors must collectively own at least 80 percent of the total combined voting power and at least 80 percent of all other classes of stock immediately after the exchange, per Section 368(c). The second test is the diversification test: no single security can exceed 25 percent of a contributor's portfolio, and the top five holdings cannot exceed 50 percent in aggregate. Contributions that fail these tests trigger taxable gain recognition.

The control test is typically satisfied by the issuers of the ETF. ETF issuers structure the contribution window so that the founding investors — those contributing appreciated securities — hold at least 80 percent of the shares at launch. The issuer may seed the remaining shares with cash or other assets, but the founding contributors must clear the 80 percent threshold for Section 351 to apply.

The 25/50 diversification test is where most contributions fail. If you hold $1 million in a single stock and nothing else, that stock represents 100 percent of your portfolio — far above the 25 percent single-security cap. To qualify, you would need to contribute a portfolio where no single position exceeds 25 percent and the top five positions together do not exceed 50 percent. Investors with true single-stock concentration often cannot use a 351 ETF Exchange directly; they may need to first diversify partially through other strategies that work with concentrated positions.

The contribution timeline typically spans several weeks: the issuer announces a launch date, opens a contribution window, collects investor paperwork and tax-lot data, verifies compliance with the control and diversification tests, and then closes the window before the ETF begins trading. Missing the contribution window means waiting for the next fund launch.

Part two.
Liquidity, eligibility, and basis mechanics

The key advantage: full liquidity

Once a 351 ETF Exchange completes and the ETF lists on a public exchange, contributors own the shares of the newly formed ETF. There is no statutory holding period. The ETF Shares can be sold immediately at the prevailing market price. Any gain or loss is measured against the carried-over cost basis of the original contributed position. That is the single most consequential difference between this vehicle and the alternatives investors typically consider for diversifying appreciated portfolios.

Access to complete liquidity creates significant flexibility for investors. They can rebalance, trim, or fully exit their ETF shares at any time. Tax-aware selling becomes feasible: sales can be timed to lower-income years, paired with harvested losses elsewhere, or coordinated with charitable giving to manage the realized gains. Estate planning also becomes simpler — a single ETF position is easier to gift, transfer in trust, or leave to heirs under a step-up than a sprawling portfolio of individual holdings.

Most importantly, investors can sell incrementally to meet liquidity needs without forcing a full-position liquidation. The contributed cost basis carries to each ETF share proportionally, so partial sales realize a proportionate share of the embedded gain — the same first-in-first-out or specific-lot identification rules that apply to any ETF position.

However, keep in mind that the tax deferral is most valuable when the position is allowed to grow further after the ETF Conversion; selling shortly after the ETF Conversion gives the deferral back and incurs the same gain the contribution was designed to defer. Treat the ETF as a multi-year hold and sell only when there is a tax-aware reason to do so.

"A 351 ETF Exchange is a diversified-to-diversified transaction. Your contributing portfolio must already meet the 25/50 test — no single position above 25 percent, top five no more than 50 percent."

Who qualifies: the 25/50 contributor diversification test

Your portfolio must already meet the 25/50 diversification test before you contribute. The test, codified in IRC Section 368(a)(2)(F)(ii) and incorporated into Section 351 via Section 351(e)(1), requires that no single security represents more than 25 percent of the total value of your contribution and that the top five positions together represent no more than 50 percent.1 If your portfolio fails either threshold, the contribution does not qualify for nonrecognition treatment and you would owe capital gains tax on the full embedded gain at contribution.

Because the test applies to the individual contributor's portfolio rather than the pooled fund, the 351 ETF Exchange works only for investors who arrive at the table with an already-diversified holding. Vested RSUs accumulating in one ticker, founder shares from an exit, or a long-held legacy position will fail the 25/50 math on their own — those investors typically need to diversify partially through other tools before the 351 path becomes available, often over multiple tax years.

A common use case is a separately managed account that has run out of tax-loss harvesting opportunity: 200 to 500 individual positions, no single stock above 25 percent, top five stocks typically 20 to 35 percent combined, with embedded gains accumulated over the SMA's lifetime. A self-directed multi-stock portfolio built across many years by investors who have spread their taxable wealth across 20 to 30 names with no dominant position are also natural candidates.

Most 351 ETF Exchanges accept publicly-traded U.S. equities, certain ADRs, and sometimes other liquid securities. Restricted stock, private positions, options, and most non-public assets generally do not qualify. Each issuer publishes an eligibility list when its contribution window opens, with qualifying tickers, sector caps, and any vehicle-specific restrictions varying by ETF.

351 ETF Exchanges are generally open to all investors, and are not restricted to accredited investors or qualified purchasers. However, minimum contribution that most issuers require is typically $1 million or higher.

Make sure to run the 25/50 check at the household level. If you pass, the 351 ETF Exchange opens up as a consolidation option for an appreciated portfolio. If you do not pass, the strategy is not available at this stage. In that case, the right sequence often starts with diversifying through other strategies first, opening the door to a 351 contribution once the portfolio composition has shifted.

Cost basis, holding period, and tax-lot mechanics

When you contribute appreciated property to a 351 ETF Exchange, the original cost basis carries over to the ETF shares you receive. A $1 million contribution with a $200,000 basis becomes $1 million of ETF shares with a $200,000 carryover basis under Section 358.2 The embedded $800,000 gain stays with you; nonrecognition at contribution defers the gain, it does not eliminate it. When you eventually sell the ETF shares, gain is recognized based on that carryover basis.

Holding period works the same way. ETF shares inherit the holding period of the contributed property, so a five-year hold on the original stock becomes a five-year hold on the ETF shares immediately upon conversion. Any future sale of the ETF shares qualifies for long-term capital gains treatment from day one of trading, provided the original lots had already crossed the one-year mark. Lots that were still short-term at contribution remain short-term until enough time passes under their original acquisition date.

Tax-lot tracking is what makes the post-contribution math valuable in practice. Suppose three contributed lots: Lot A with a $50,000 basis and a five-year holding period, Lot B with $100,000 basis and two years, Lot C with $50,000 basis and six months. When you later sell ETF shares, you can specify which lot you are drawing from — selling Lot A first produces the largest gain but at long-term rates; selling Lot C produces a smaller gain but at short-term rates. The right choice depends on your tax bracket in the year of sale and the rest of the realized-gain picture for that year.

Issuers handle the bookkeeping to make all of this work. At contribution, you supply detailed tax-lot data — acquisition dates, cost bases, share counts. The ETF administrator maintains those records and reports them on Form 1099-B when you sell. Keeping clean records at contribution prevents headaches at tax time, particularly for investors with long histories of dividend reinvestment or DRIP-acquired positions where lot-level detail can be incomplete.

Wondering whether your taxable portfolio passes the 25/50 test for a 351 ETF Exchange?Talk to an advisor
Part three.
Comparing vehicles and making the decision

351 ETF Exchange vs traditional Exchange Fund

Both strategies defer capital gains tax on appreciated stock contributed to a new fund. That's where the similarity ends. The differences are in liquidity, eligibility, contribution mechanics, and minimum size — and each difference creates a different fit for different investors.

Liquidity profile. A 351 ETF Exchange provides full liquidity once the ETF lists on an exchange; there is no statutory holding period, and contributors can rebalance, trim, or exit at any time at the prevailing market price. A traditional Exchange Fund imposes a seven-year holding period. Early redemptions before that mark surrender the tax deferral and incur penalties.

Portfolio at contribution. A 351 ETF Exchange requires the contributing portfolio to pass the 25/50 diversification test at contribution: no single position above 25 percent, top five no more than 50 percent. The traditional Exchange Fund has no pre-contribution diversification test — investors can contribute a single concentrated stock, since the partnership achieves diversification by pooling many contributors' positions inside the fund.

Investment horizon. A 351 ETF Exchange suits investors who want optionality and may need to draw from the position incrementally over time. The traditional Exchange Fund suits investors who can genuinely lock up capital for at least seven years or more and want the partnership's deeper concentration-risk transformation.

Minimum investment. A 351 ETF Exchange typically launches with minimums of $250,000 to $1 million for a coordinated participation slot — meaningfully accessible relative to legacy structures. Traditional Exchange Funds often start at $500,000 and run to $5 million or higher at institutional providers; some legacy funds gate on qualified-purchaser status ($5 million+ in investments).

Investor eligibility. A 351 ETF Exchange is generally open to all investors, not restricted to accredited or qualified-purchaser tiers. The traditional Exchange Fund is limited to accredited investors at minimum and frequently to qualified purchasers; the legal structure (partnership offered as a private placement) drives that restriction.

Side-by-side comparison of 351 ETF Exchange and traditional Exchange Fund structures.

Feature351 ETF ExchangeTraditional Exchange Fund
Statutory basisSection 351 (corporate)Section 721 (partnership)
Holding periodNone post-formationSeven years under Sections 704(c)(1)(B) and 737
LiquidityDaily once ETF tradesIlliquid for seven years
Diversification test25/50 rule at contributionNo pre-contribution test; diversification achieved via pooling
Typical minimum$250,000 – $1,000,000$500,000 – $5,000,000
Entity typeRegulated investment company (ETF)Limited partnership
Basis treatmentCarryover under Section 358Carryover under Section 722
Best fitInvestors needing liquidity flexibilityInvestors who can commit capital for seven years
Minimums vary by issuer and may change. Consult with an advisor for current terms.

A case study: Jeevan's $2.3M diversified SMA

Jeevan opened a Direct Indexing SMA in 2018 with a $400,000 cash deposit, mirroring the S&P 500 with systematic loss harvesting. Over seven years of contributions and market appreciation, the account has grown to $2.3 million across roughly 380 individual positions. Cumulative harvested losses have offset roughly $300,000 of capital gains elsewhere in his portfolio — a meaningful win. The problem: the harvesting engine has stalled.

By year seven, most of Jeevan's individual positions are deeply above their cost basis. The annual loss yield has dropped below 0.5%, and the cumulative embedded gain across the account is roughly $1.4 million. He wants to simplify — consolidate the SMA into a single ETF holding for easier reporting, lower ongoing fees, and a cleaner estate plan. Selling out of the SMA would trigger roughly $330,000 in combined federal and California capital gains tax (20% federal LTCG + 3.8% NIIT + 13.3% California).

Jeevan's portfolio passes the 25/50 test comfortably. His largest position (Apple) is 6% of the account; top five total 22%. The full account qualifies as a 351 contribution. He joins a coordinated launch alongside several dozen other contributors with similar profiles, the new ETF forms with an aggregate $300M of contributions, and Jeevan's $2.3M of SMA holdings convert to roughly $2.3M of the new ETF's shares at the prevailing market price.

The math at exit. His original $400K cost basis carries forward to the ETF shares. The $1.4M of embedded gain remains deferred — taxable only when he eventually sells ETF shares. He gains daily liquidity (the ETF trades on a public exchange), administrative simplification (one position instead of 380), and continued market exposure. The strategy does not eliminate his future tax bill; it consolidates the harvesting-stalled SMA into a vehicle he can sell incrementally on his own schedule rather than face an all-at-once decision.

Case Study
Jeevan · Direct Indexing SMA · $2.3M across ~380 positions · $400K original basis · 7-year hold

Jeevan funded a Direct Indexing SMA in 2018 with $400,000 and added $100,000 of contributions across the first three years. Aggressive loss harvesting through 2019-2022 offset roughly $300,000 of capital gains in his other accounts during the early years. By 2025, the SMA holds about 380 individual positions averaging $6,000 each. The top single name (Apple) is 6% of the account. Top five total 22%.

The harvesting engine has effectively run out. Most positions are deeply above their cost basis, and the annual loss yield has dropped below 0.5%. The administrative complexity of 380 positions across his and his spouse's accounts is now meaningful — annual tax documents run to hundreds of pages, basis tracking requires custom software, and any sale requires identifying specific tax lots manually.

Jeevan contributes the full SMA to a 351 ETF Exchange. The portfolio passes the 25/50 test, the contribution qualifies for nonrecognition under Section 351, and his $400,000 original cost basis carries forward to the new ETF shares. He now holds a single position worth $2.3 million instead of 380 positions, with the same market exposure and the embedded gains still deferred. When he eventually wants to draw from the account, he can sell ETF shares at the prevailing price and recognize gain at his then-current tax bracket — gradually, on his schedule, with one position to manage rather than several hundred.

When the 351 ETF Exchange is not the right fit

The 351 ETF Exchange is not a universal solution. Several situations push investors toward other vehicles or strategies.

True single-stock concentration. If your entire portfolio is one stock, you fail the 25/50 test. The traditional Exchange Fund accepts single-stock contributions because it diversifies internally. Alternatively, Direct Indexing lets you build a diversified portfolio around the concentrated position, harvesting losses to offset future gains when you eventually sell.

Restricted stock or lockup shares. Unvested RSUs, shares subject to Rule 144 restrictions, and shares under contractual lockup agreements are not eligible for contribution. You must wait until the shares are freely tradable before a 351 ETF Exchange becomes available.

Charitable intent. If you want to turn appreciated stock into an income stream while benefiting a charitable cause, a Charitable Remainder Trust may be more appropriate. The CRT sells the contributed stock tax-free inside the trust, invests the proceeds, and pays you an annuity or unitrust amount for life. The 351 ETF Exchange produces ETF shares, not income — different outcome, different fit.

Need for immediate diversification. 351 ETF Exchanges only occur during contribution windows before a new fund launch. If no window is open, you cannot contribute. Investors who need to diversify immediately may need to accept a taxable sale, use Direct Indexing to harvest losses against the gain, or wait for the next contribution window.

Non-US persons. Most 351 ETF Exchanges are structured for US taxpayers. Non-resident aliens face different tax treatment and may not be eligible for the same deferral benefits.

Considering a 351 ETF Exchange but unsure whether it fits your tax situation and timeline?Talk to an advisor
Part four.
Accessing 351 ETF Exchanges and next steps

How InverseWealth helps you access 351 ETF Exchanges

351 ETF Exchanges are offered by a small number of specialized ETF issuers, including multiple specialty ETF issuers, and are typically available only during limited contribution windows before a new fund launch. InverseWealth maintains relationships with these managers and coordinates the contribution process on behalf of clients — verifying eligibility, uploading tax-lot data, and completing compliance documentation. As a fee-only fiduciary, InverseWealth does not receive commissions or placement fees from ETF issuers; our incentive is to match you with the structure that fits your tax situation, liquidity needs, and investment horizon.

The coordination role matters because the contribution process is not self-service. Issuers require detailed tax-lot information, investor attestations, and compliance verification. Missing a deadline or submitting incomplete paperwork can disqualify you from the contribution window. Working with an advisor who has experience with the process reduces friction and ensures your documentation is complete.

InverseWealth also helps you decide whether the 351 ETF Exchange is the right vehicle in the first place. For some clients, the traditional Exchange Fund is a better fit despite the lockup. For others, Direct Indexing or a Charitable Remainder Trust aligns better with their goals. The advisory relationship means you get an objective recommendation, not a product sale.

If you hold concentrated stock and want to explore whether a 351 ETF Exchange fits your situation, the first step is a conversation about your portfolio composition, your tax basis, your liquidity needs, and your investment timeline. From there, we can determine whether you pass the eligibility tests, identify upcoming contribution windows, and coordinate the process if you decide to proceed.

Multi-state tax considerations

The Section 351 deferral applies at the federal level, but state tax treatment varies. Most states conform to the federal Section 351 rules and do not recognize gain at contribution. California, New York, and other high-tax states generally follow this treatment.

However, state-level nuances can arise. If you move states between contribution and eventual sale, the state where you reside at sale determines your state capital gains tax. California residents who contribute to a 351 ETF Exchange and later move to a no-income-tax state like Texas or Nevada may reduce their eventual state tax liability. The federal gain is unchanged, but the state tax component can differ significantly.

State conformity to federal partnership and corporate rules is not always automatic. Before contributing, verify that your state of residence conforms to Section 351 treatment. If you live in a state with unusual conformity rules or plan to relocate, discuss the implications with a tax advisor who understands multi-state taxation.

The ETF itself is typically domiciled in a state with favorable fund taxation (often Delaware or Maryland). The ETF's domicile does not directly affect your personal state tax liability; what matters is your state of residence at the time you sell.

Coordinating with your broader financial plan

A 351 ETF Exchange is one tool in a broader toolkit for managing concentrated stock. How it fits depends on what else is happening in your financial life.

10b5-1 plans. If you have an active 10b5-1 selling plan for your employer stock, contributing that stock to a 351 ETF Exchange may not be possible — the shares are committed to the plan. Coordinate the timing of plan termination and contribution windows carefully.

QSBS eligibility. If your concentrated position qualifies for the Section 1202 qualified small business stock exclusion, selling may be tax-free up to $10 million in gain. The 351 ETF Exchange defers gain but does not eliminate it; QSBS can eliminate gain entirely. Verify whether your shares qualify before choosing deferral over exclusion.

Estate planning. If you intend to hold the position until death and pass it to heirs, the step-up in basis at death may eliminate the embedded gain entirely. In that scenario, the Section 351 deferral is less valuable — you were going to defer anyway through continued holding. The ETF diversification still has merit (reducing single-stock risk), but the tax-deferral benefit is diminished.

Tax-loss harvesting elsewhere. If you have harvested losses in other accounts, you can use those losses to offset gains from selling ETF shares. The Section 351 contribution does not consume those losses; they remain available. Strategic pairing of gains and losses across your portfolio can reduce the eventual tax cost when you sell the ETF position.

The best outcomes come from treating concentrated-stock management as a multi-year, multi-tool problem. The 351 ETF Exchange may be the right move this year; Direct Indexing might complement it next year; a partial charitable gift might make sense later. A fee-only fiduciary helps you coordinate across these options over time.

"No seven-year lockup. Once the ETF lists and trades, contributors hold a daily-liquid position with the same Section 351 tax-deferral that founders have used since 1954."
Ready to explore whether a 351 ETF Exchange fits your concentrated-stock strategy?Talk to an advisor

Related strategies

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

What is a 351 ETF Exchange?

A 351 ETF Exchange is a tax-deferred transaction in which investors contribute appreciated securities to a newly formed ETF and receive ETF shares in return. Under Section 351 of the Internal Revenue Code, no gain or loss is recognized at the time of contribution, provided the contributing investors collectively own at least 80 percent of the ETF immediately after the exchange. The investor's original cost basis and holding period carry over to the new ETF shares under Sections 358 and 362, deferring the tax liability until the ETF shares are eventually sold.

How is a 351 ETF Exchange different from a traditional Exchange Fund?

A traditional Exchange Fund is a limited partnership under Section 721 that imposes a seven-year holding period to preserve tax-deferred treatment under Sections 704(c)(1)(B) and 737. A 351 ETF Exchange is a corporation structured as a regulated investment company; once the ETF begins trading, investors can sell their shares on any trading day with no statutory lockup. The trade-off: Section 351 contributions must pass the 25/50 diversification test at the time of contribution, whereas traditional Exchange Funds pool assets to achieve diversification internally.

What is the 25/50 diversification rule for Section 351 contributions?

Under Section 368(a)(2)(F)(ii), no single security can represent more than 25 percent of a contributor's portfolio value, and the top five holdings cannot exceed 50 percent in aggregate. Portfolios that fail this test do not qualify for tax-deferred treatment under Section 351. The rule ensures the contributed assets are already reasonably diversified before entering the ETF. Investors with true single-stock concentration may not qualify and should consider alternative vehicles like the traditional Exchange Fund or Direct Indexing.

What happens to my cost basis after a 351 ETF Exchange?

Under Section 358, your basis in the ETF shares equals your basis in the contributed securities. Under Section 362, the ETF itself takes a carryover basis in the assets you contributed. Your original tax lots are preserved, so if you contributed three lots with different acquisition dates and bases, those three lots reappear as corresponding ETF share lots. This allows you to select specific lots for future sales, optimizing for long-term versus short-term capital gains treatment and managing the timing of gain recognition.

Who is eligible to participate in a 351 ETF Exchange?

Eligibility generally requires US-person status and, depending on the ETF issuer, accredited-investor qualification under SEC rules. Eligible assets include publicly traded equities and certain RIC-structured ETFs. Ineligible assets include restricted stock, options, futures, cryptocurrency, and partnership interests. Investors must also confirm their holdings satisfy the 25/50 diversification test before contributing. Contribution minimums typically range from $250,000 to $1 million depending on the issuer.

Can I sell my ETF shares immediately after a 351 ETF Exchange?

Yes. Once the ETF begins trading, you can sell your shares on any trading day without restriction. There is no statutory holding period for Section 351 ETF shares, unlike the seven-year holding period imposed by Sections 704(c)(1)(B) and 737 on traditional Exchange Fund interests. However, selling triggers gain recognition based on your carryover cost basis, so you will owe capital gains tax on the difference between the sale proceeds and your original basis in the contributed shares.

What are the tax consequences if I later sell my ETF shares?

When you sell ETF shares, you recognize capital gain or loss equal to the difference between the sale proceeds and your carryover cost basis. If your holding period — including the tacked period from the contributed securities — exceeds one year, the gain qualifies for long-term capital gains rates, currently a maximum of 23.8 percent federally including the Net Investment Income Tax under Section 1411. Short-term lots are taxed at ordinary income rates. You can choose which specific lots to sell to optimize your tax outcome.

How do I access a 351 ETF Exchange?

351 ETF Exchanges are offered by a small number of specialized ETF issuers, including multiple specialty ETF issuers, during limited contribution windows before a new fund launch. InverseWealth maintains relationships with these managers and coordinates the process on behalf of clients — verifying eligibility, uploading tax-lot data, and completing compliance documentation. Working with a fee-only fiduciary advisor ensures the vehicle fits your specific tax situation and liquidity needs, and that your paperwork is complete before the contribution window closes.

Sources
Footnotes
  1. 1. Section 368(c) defines control as ownership of at least 80 percent of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock entitled to vote and at least 80 percent of the total number of shares of all other classes of stock.
  2. 2. Under Section 358(a), the basis of property received in a Section 351 exchange equals the basis of the property exchanged, decreased by money received and increased by gain recognized.
  3. 3. Section 704(c)(1)(B) requires gain recognition if contributed property is distributed to another partner within seven years of contribution, creating the holding-period requirement for traditional Exchange Funds.

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