Federal ProgramPermanent Law 2025

Opportunity Zones

A federal tax incentive program directing private capital into economically distressed communities through capital gains deferral and elimination. Now permanently embedded in law under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 ("OBBBA").

8,764
Originally designated QOZ tracts (2018)
Now Permanent
No sunset under 2025 law
0%
Capital gains on appreciation at 10 years
180 days
Window to invest deferred gain
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Last updated: May 2026 | Reviewed for accuracy

History of Opportunity Zones

Opportunity Zones were created by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 — a bipartisan provision championed by Senators Tim Scott and Cory Booker as a mechanism to attract long-term private investment into the country's most distressed census tracts without relying on direct government spending.

The mechanism was straightforward in concept: instead of taxing capital gains immediately upon realization, the government would allow investors to defer those taxes if they redirected the gain into a designated low-income community within 180 days. Hold long enough and the government would also reduce the original tax owed — and waive all tax on new gains generated inside the zone.

2017
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act creates Opportunity Zones
IRC Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 enacted. Governors given 90 days to nominate up to 25% of eligible low-income census tracts. Treasury certifies designations.
2018
8,764 tracts designated nationwide
Treasury certifies final QOZ designations covering approximately 35 million residents across all 50 states, D.C., and U.S. territories. IRS begins issuing proposed regulations.
2019
Final OZ regulations issued
Treasury issues final regulations clarifying QOF compliance, the 90% asset test, the substantial improvement requirement, the working capital safe harbor, and the two-tier fund structure.
2020–24
Market matures — sunset uncertainty looms
Billions deployed into QOF investments. Institutional fund sponsors scale up. The original program's gain deferral window was set to expire December 31, 2026, suppressing long-term institutional participation.
2025
OBBBA — OZ made permanent
Program permanently extended. OZ 2.0 updates enhance investor benefits. A new Rural OZ category is created. New designation rounds authorized, allowing states to refresh their QOZ tract maps.
2026
New designation cycle underway
States actively working with Treasury on updated QOZ designations. Institutional investment accelerates with permanent law certainty. Rural OZ program launches in newly eligible tracts.

Tax Benefits

The OZ program has evolved through three phases, each with its own investor benefits. Which version applies depends on when the gain was realized and when the QOF investment was made.

1
Deferral of Original Gain
Capital gains reinvested into a QOF within 180 days are deferred until the earlier of a QOF disposition or the program recognition deadline.
10%
Basis Step-Up at 5 Years
Original OZ 1.0 program: investors who held their QOF investment for at least 5 years received a 10% step-up in basis on the original deferred gain (15% at 7 years). These holding-period benefits applied to investments made under the original program timeline.
0%
Tax on Appreciation at 10 Years
Investors who hold for at least 10 years may elect to treat QOF basis as equal to fair market value at sale — zero federal capital gains tax on all appreciation inside the OZ investment.
Key Distinction

The 10-year exclusion applies only to appreciation inside the OZ investment. The original deferred gain is still recognized and taxed (reduced by the basis step-up). These are two separate benefits applying to two separate amounts.

The OBBBA enhanced the original OZ program for new investments made after the effective date. OZ 2.0 benefits apply to gains invested in QOFs under permanent law.

No Sunset on Deferral
Under OZ 2.0, there is no expiration date on gain deferral. Investors are no longer racing against a recognition deadline. The gain is deferred until disposition of the QOF interest.
Enhanced Basis Step-Up
OZ 2.0 modifies the basis step-up benefit framework for long-term investors. Specific step-up percentages and holding period thresholds are determined by the 2025 legislation and implementing Treasury regulations. Confirm current rates with tax counsel.
0%
Appreciation Exclusion Preserved
The 10-year zero-tax appreciation exclusion is preserved and strengthened under OZ 2.0, with clarified election mechanics for permanently designated zones.
2025 Update

The permanent extension removes the single biggest overhang for long-term OZ deal structuring. Developers and fund sponsors can now underwrite 10-year holds with full legal certainty that the program will be in place at exit.

The OBBBA created a new Rural Opportunity Zone category — a significant expansion targeting rural census tracts that were previously ineligible or underrepresented in original OZ designations.

New in 2025

Rural OZ tracts carry enhanced tax benefits beyond the standard OZ program to compensate for the lower return potential of rural markets and attract capital that would otherwise concentrate in urban zones.

+
Enhanced Step-Up Benefits
Rural OZ investments receive additional basis step-up benefits on the original deferred gain, making after-tax returns more competitive with urban OZ deals.
New
Expanded Eligible Tracts
Rural OZ designations cover census tracts with rural character not designated in the original 2018 cycle. States submit new nominations through Treasury under the 2025 reauthorization.
0%
Appreciation Exclusion Preserved
Rural OZ investments retain the 10-year zero-tax appreciation exclusion with the same election mechanics at disposition as the standard program.

Implementing regulations for the Rural OZ program were still being finalized as of mid-2026. Practitioners must confirm current rural tract eligibility and benefit parameters directly with tax counsel before relying on any Rural OZ benefit described above in deal structuring or investor materials.

Fund Structures

Capital flows into OZ projects through a Qualified Opportunity Fund (QOF) — a partnership or corporation self-certified to invest in Qualified Opportunity Zone Property. The QOF is the investment vehicle; the underlying real estate sits one level below in a Qualified Opportunity Zone Business (QOZB).

Single-Asset vs. Multi-Asset Funds

A single-asset QOF is formed for one specific project — one QOF, one QOZB, one property. Most common in real estate because it ties investor returns and exit mechanics to a single identifiable asset.

A multi-asset QOF holds interests in multiple QOZBs across multiple projects, providing investors with diversified OZ exposure. More complex to administer and less common where project-specific financing structures make consolidation difficult.

Deep Dive Article — Coming Soon
Every OZ Deal Structure, Explained: A Practitioner's Guide →

The diagram below shows the standard two-tier OZ ownership chain for a real estate deal — from the investor through the QOF and QOZB down to the underlying property.

Standard OZ Two-Tier Legal Structure
Capital gains investors
OZ Investors
Invest deferred capital gains within 180 days of gain recognition event
Tier 1 — Investment Vehicle
Qualified Opportunity Fund (QOF)
Partnership or corporation · Self-certified to IRS · Must pass 90% asset test semi-annually
Tier 2 — Operating Entity
Qualified Opportunity Zone Business (QOZB)
LLC or partnership · Passes 70% tangible property test · Actively conducts business in QOZ · Holds the real estate
Underlying Asset
Qualified Opportunity Zone Property
Real estate in a designated QOZ tract · Original use or substantially improved · Substantial improvement = doubling adjusted basis within 30 months
The QOF holds an interest in the QOZB — not the property directly. The QOZB owns and operates the real estate. This two-tier structure is required for most real estate OZ deals and is where compliance tests are applied at each level.

Key Compliance Requirements

RequirementApplied AtStandardFrequency
90% Asset TestQOF level90% of assets must be QOZ propertySemi-annually
70% Tangible Property TestQOZB level70% of tangible property must be QOZBPAnnually
Substantial ImprovementQOZB levelDouble adjusted basis within 30 months30-month window
Active Conduct of BusinessQOZB levelMust actively conduct business in the QOZOngoing
Working Capital Safe HarborQOZB levelUp to 31 months to deploy working capitalWritten plan required
180-Day Investment WindowQOF levelGain must be invested within 180 daysAt investment

Investor Profile

OZ investors are not traditional real estate equity investors. They are capital gains holders seeking a tax-efficient destination for a specific gain event. Understanding their motivation is essential for developers trying to raise OZ equity.

Who Invests in OZ Funds

  • High-net-worth individuals with gains from stock sales, business sales, or real estate transactions
  • Family offices with recurring annual gains from diversified portfolios
  • Private equity and hedge funds with carried interest and portfolio realization events
  • Corporations with capital gains from asset sales or portfolio rebalancing
  • Real estate operators selling appreciated properties seeking tax-efficient reinvestment

What OZ Investors Want

The primary motivator is the 10-year appreciation exclusion. OZ investors need a credible path to a liquidity event at or after year 10 — either a sale, a QOF interest transfer, or a recapitalization. They accept below-market investment returns because the tax benefit compensates for the yield discount.

QOZ Designations

Opportunity Zone designations are made by state governors and certified by the U.S. Treasury. The original 8,764 tracts were designated in 2018. The OBBBA authorized new designation rounds with updated QOZ tracts being certified through 2026 and beyond under both standard and Rural OZ categories.

StateDesignated TractsNotable Markets
California879Los Angeles, Oakland, Fresno, San Bernardino
Texas628Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, El Paso
New York514Bronx, Brooklyn, Buffalo, Syracuse
Florida427Miami, Jacksonville, Tampa, Orlando
Illinois327Chicago South Side, Rockford, Peoria
Pennsylvania300Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Allentown
Ohio320Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati
New Jersey169Newark, Camden, Trenton, Paterson
How to Verify

The Treasury CDFI Fund maintains the official QOZ tract map. Always verify current designation status before structuring a deal — particularly as new Rural OZ designations roll out under the 2025 permanent legislation.

2026 OZ Landscape

The permanent status of Opportunity Zones has fundamentally changed the investment calculus. Several trends are shaping OZ deal flow in 2026:

  • New tract designations — States are actively refreshing QOZ designations, creating opportunities in markets previously ineligible.
  • Institutional fund growth — Major asset managers have launched or expanded OZ fund platforms following permanent extension.
  • Rural OZ launch — The new Rural OZ category is attracting capital to markets with no meaningful prior OZ activity.
  • Site competition — Permanent status has accelerated site acquisition in designated tracts. Early site control matters more than ever.
  • State conformity issues — Not all states conform to federal OZ treatment. California does not provide a state capital gains exclusion. This materially affects after-tax returns for in-state investors and must be addressed in fund documents.
  • ESG-driven mandates — Institutional fund sponsors increasingly seek OZ deals with measurable community impact, driven by LP ESG requirements.

OZ Deal Structures

Opportunity Zones can be structured in several ways depending on asset type, investor base, and other financing involved. The full breakdown of every OZ deal structure — single-asset funds, multi-asset funds, new construction vs. substantial improvement, and how each structure affects compliance testing — is covered in a dedicated practitioner guide.

Deep Dive Article — Coming Soon
Every OZ Deal Structure, Explained: A Practitioner's Guide →

Opportunity Zones are frequently used alongside other federal and state subsidy programs. Each program below has its own dedicated guide — covering how it works independently and where it intersects with OZ financing.

Important · Not legal, tax, or financial advice

This guide summarizes federal and program-specific rules as of May 2026 and is intended for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, tax advice, financial advice, investment advice, or any other professional advice. Affordable housing transactions involve complex federal tax, state regulatory, partnership, and real estate law. Before structuring or closing any transaction, consult qualified counsel, your CPA, your tax credit professional, and other appropriate advisors. See the full Disclaimer and Terms of Service.