What to do when
your DST stops distributions
Haselkorn & Thibaut, P.A., operating as Investment Fraud Lawyers,
represents individual investors who lost income after their Delaware
Statutory Trust stopped making distributions. We are former Wall Street
defense attorneys who now use that insider knowledge to help investors
recover losses caused by unsuitable recommendations, incomplete due
diligence, and sponsor misconduct.
When a DST stops distributions, the impact is immediate. Investors
who planned their retirement or cash flow around that income face a gap
they cannot easily fill. The DST structure provides no voting rights, no
management control, and no easy exit. This article explains why
distributions stop, what it may signal about the underlying investment,
and what steps investors can take.
Why DST distributions stop
Distributions from a DST depend on the property’s net operating
income. When that income falls below the amount needed to service debt,
pay operating expenses, and fund reserves, the sponsor may suspend
distributions. Common causes include:
| Cause | What happens | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Property-level cash-flow decline | Rental income drops below projections | Healthcare property occupancy falls; tenant defaults on lease |
| Debt maturity and refinancing failure | Non-recourse debt becomes due in a weak market; new terms are unfavorable |
Sponsor cannot refinance at comparable rates |
| Tax reassessment | Local government increases the property’s assessed value, raising property taxes |
One on 4th DST: San Diego County reassessment increased costs significantly |
| Capital expenditure requirements | Property needs unexpected repairs or improvements | HVAC replacement, roof repair, or code compliance work |
| Sponsor financial distress | The sponsor’s own financial problems divert cash or attention | Inspired Healthcare Capital bankruptcy halted distributions across multiple programs |
Distribution stoppage
as a warning sign
A distribution stoppage is not always a temporary setback. In many
cases, it signals deeper problems that the sponsor may not fully
disclose. Investors should pay close attention to these red flags:
- Distributions stopped with no clear explanation from the
sponsor. - The sponsor replaces projected distribution dates with vague
timelines. - Communication from the sponsor decreases or becomes generic.
- The sponsor requests additional capital contributions from
investors. - The property faces a tax reassessment, environmental issue, or major
tenant loss.
Each of these signs may indicate that the DST is under financial
stress. The sooner investors act, the more options they may have.
Five steps
to take when your DST stops distributions
Step 1: gather your documents
Collect your subscription agreement, private placement memorandum,
brokerage statements, tax forms (Schedule K-1), and all communications
from the sponsor and your broker. These documents form the basis for
evaluating any potential claim.
Step 2: review the
offering documents
Read the private placement memorandum carefully. Look for the
sections on distribution policies, reserves, and risk factors. Compare
what the PPM disclosed about distribution stability to what actually
happened. If the PPM projected steady distributions while the sponsor
knew or should have known about risks, that gap may support a claim.
Step 3: contact the
sponsor in writing
Request a written explanation for the distribution stoppage. Ask
specific questions: What is the current occupancy rate? Has the property
been reassessed? Are there capital expenditure requirements? Is the DST
in default on its debt? Keep a record of all correspondence.
Step 4: evaluate
your broker’s recommendation
Consider whether the broker who recommended the DST understood your
liquidity needs, risk tolerance, and investment objectives. If you
needed regular income and were placed in a long-hold, illiquid DST, the
recommendation may have been unsuitable under FINRA Rule 2111.
Step 5: consult a
securities attorney
An attorney experienced in DST investor losses can review your
documents, evaluate whether the broker or sponsor violated any rules,
and advise you on the best path forward. Most initial consultations are
free.
Action checklist
| Step | Action | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gather subscription agreement, PPM, K-1s, and statements | Establishes the terms and timeline |
| 2 | Review PPM distribution and risk sections | Identifies gaps between disclosures and reality |
| 3 | Contact the sponsor in writing | Creates a paper trail and forces a response |
| 4 | Evaluate broker suitability | Determines whether the recommendation was appropriate |
| 5 | Consult a securities attorney | Identifies actionable claims and recovery options |
FINRA rules that protect
DST investors
Broker-dealers that recommend DST interests must follow specific
rules. When they fail, investors may have claims in FINRA
arbitration.
| Rule or notice | What it requires | Relevance to distribution stoppages |
|---|---|---|
| FINRA Rule 2111 | Suitability based on reasonable diligence and customer profile | A broker must evaluate whether an illiquid, distribution-dependent product fits the investor |
| FINRA Regulatory Notice 10-22 | Reasonable investigation of private placements | Firms must document due diligence on sponsor, property, and risks |
| FINRA Regulatory Notice 05-18 | Balanced risk disclosure for complex products | Marketing cannot overstate income while understating distribution risk |
| FINRA Rule 2210 | Fair and balanced communications | Sales materials must not misrepresent distribution stability |
Distribution
stoppages in context: recent DST failures
Distribution stoppages are not isolated events. They have occurred
across multiple DST sponsors and programs in recent years. The table
below summarizes confirmed distribution disruptions:
| DST program | Sponsor | What happened | Impact on investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hayworth Tanglewood DST | Inspired Healthcare Capital | Distributions halted; sponsor filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy | Income stopped; investors have no control over bankruptcy proceedings |
| One on 4th DST | Versity Investments / 1031 Crowdfunding | Property tax reassessment increased costs; distributions stopped |
Sponsor replaced by Crew Enterprises; investors had no vote |
| Apex South Creek DST | Inspired Healthcare Capital | Included in bankruptcy proceedings | Distributions disrupted |
| Naperville Multifamily DST | Inland Private Capital | Under investigation for suitability of recommendations | Investor losses reported |
| 345 Flats DST | Nelson Brothers | Under investigation for allegedly misleading disclosures | Investors report liquidity and distribution concerns |
These cases illustrate a common pattern: investors were promised
stable distributions from passive real estate investments, but the DST
structure concentrated risk in the sponsor’s hands. When the sponsor
encountered problems, investors had no ability to intervene.
Why
distribution stoppages are often foreseeable
In many cases, the risks that led to distribution stoppages were
disclosed in the PPM — if investors and brokers had read them carefully.
Common foreseeable risks include:
- Property tax reassessment. 1031 exchange properties
are often reassessed at market value upon transfer, increasing the tax
burden. This was a direct cause of the One on 4th DST distribution
stoppage. - Sponsor financial distress. If the sponsor has a
history of financial problems or prior program failures, distribution
risk is elevated. - Debt maturity. Non-recourse debt that matures
before the property can be sold creates refinancing risk. If new terms
are unfavorable, distributions may stop. - Single-tenant or single-property concentration. A
DST that holds one property depends entirely on that property’s
performance. Any localized downturn affects the entire investment.
Contact Investment Fraud
Lawyers
Haselkorn & Thibaut, P.A., operating as Investment Fraud Lawyers,
has recovered losses for investors across the country. We work on a
contingency fee basis: no recovery, no fee. We review each case at no
cost and determine whether the broker, sponsor, or both may be
liable.
If your DST has stopped distributions, call us at
1-888-885-7162 or use our confidential contact form. We
will review your brokerage statements, offering documents, and
communications to identify whether your losses were avoidable.
Legal disclaimer: Past results do not guarantee
future outcomes. Every case is unique, and recovery depends on the
specific facts, applicable law, and available defendants.
Return to our main resource on DST investor losses.
