Opportunity Zones have quietly become one of the most powerful capital-gains planning tools available to investors — and as of 2025, they’re no longer temporary. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) made the program permanent and rewrote several of its core rules, creating what many in the industry now call “OZ 2.0.”
If you’re sitting on a capital gain — from a stock sale, a business exit, or a real estate disposition — 2026 is a pivotal year. The original program (OZ 1.0) winds down for new investments at the end of 2026, the new OZ 2.0 rules take over, and a fresh round of zones is being designated. This guide walks through what Opportunity Zones are, the tax benefits, how an investment actually works, exactly what changed under OBBBA, and the mistakes we see most often.
What Are Opportunity Zones?
Opportunity Zones were created by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act with a simple goal: encourage long-term private investment in economically distressed communities. The mechanism is a tax incentive — investors who reinvest capital gains into these areas can defer, reduce, and in some cases eliminate the tax they’d otherwise owe.
The program works through designated census tracts. More than 8,700 tracts were designated nationwide in 2018 under the original program. Under OZ 2.0, a new round of tracts is being designated in 2026. One important wrinkle: states may or may not conform to the federal program, so the tax treatment at the state level isn’t always automatic.
The headline change is permanence. What began as a temporary incentive was made permanent under OBBBA in 2025 — a significant shift that gives investors and developers a long-term framework to plan around rather than a closing window.
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Interactive map of designated and eligible Opportunity Zones. Source: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The Tax Benefits: Why Investors Care
The appeal of Opportunity Zones comes down to three stacking benefits:
Postpone tax on your original gain. OZ 1.0: until 12/31/2026. OZ 2.0: a rolling 5 years from the date of investment.
A basis step-up of 10% after five years for standard funds — and 30% for Qualified Rural Opportunity Funds.
After a 10-year hold, the appreciation can be entirely tax-free — with no depreciation recapture.
Key Terms to Know
Two terms come up constantly, so it’s worth defining them up front:
The investment vehicle — a pass-through entity built to receive capital gains and deploy them into qualifying projects. It shouldn’t be used to hold significant idle cash.
The operating layer beneath the fund. It resembles a regular real estate partnership, but must genuinely be a business — so it can’t be a straight net-lease arrangement.
How an OZ Investment Actually Works
At a high level, an Opportunity Zone investment follows a predictable lifecycle:
From selling stock, a business, or property.
Generally 180 days to move the gain into a Qualified Opportunity Fund.
The QOF invests in qualified opportunity zone property, directly or indirectly.
In 2026 under OZ 1.0, or five years after investing under OZ 2.0 — potentially reduced by the basis step-up.
The minimum hold to unlock the largest benefit.
With no depreciation recapture.
A simple example
Say a taxpayer contributes $1 million of capital gains into an OZ fund, which deploys into a QOZB developing a multifamily project (using the fund’s cash, other partners’ equity, and bank debt). The taxpayer pays capital-gains tax on the original $1M in 2026 (OZ 1.0) or five years out (OZ 2.0). Over the hold, the investment grows to $2.5 million — and that $1.5 million of appreciation can be tax-free if held at least 10 years. Because there’s also no depreciation recapture, it’s often worth exploring cost segregation (unless it’s a historic tax credit project).
Staying Compliant
The benefits come with real guardrails. The ones that matter most:
- 90% asset test (QOF). At least 90% of a fund’s assets must be invested in qualified opportunity zone property.
- Substantial improvement rule. For existing buildings, the basis must be doubled within 30 months. (Doesn’t apply to vacant land.)
- 70% asset test (QOZB). At least 70% of the business’s property must be qualified opportunity zone property.
- Working-capital safe harbor. Rules may allow 31-month or 62-month windows to deploy working capital.
| IRS form | Filed by | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| 8996 | The QOF | Reports compliance with the 90% asset test. |
| 8949 | The taxpayer | Documents the deferral of gains into a QOF. |
| 8997 | The taxpayer | Annual scorecard of QOF ownership. |
Note that OZ 2.0 brings additional reporting requirements — more on that below.
Direct vs. Indirect Structures
How you structure the deal matters. There are two common approaches — and one is clearly preferred:
OZ 1.0 vs. OZ 2.0: What Actually Changed
This is the heart of the update. OBBBA didn’t just extend the program — it changed how it works for investments made after December 31, 2026. Here’s the side-by-side:
| Provision | OZ 1.0 — before Jan 1, 2027 | OZ 2.0 — after Dec 31, 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Program length | Temporary; expired after Dec 31, 2026 for new investments. | Permanent, with new zones designated every 10 years by state Governors. |
| Capital gains deferral | Deferred until Dec 31, 2026. | Rolling 5-year deferral from the date of investment. |
| Basis step-up | 10% after 5 years; +5% after 7 years (both by Dec 31, 2026). | 10% after 5 years (standard); 30% for Qualified Rural Opportunity Funds. |
| Gain exclusion (10-yr hold) | Full exclusion of appreciation if sold by Dec 31, 2047. | Full exclusion; basis frozen at FMV after 30 years if not sold. |
| Substantial improvement | Vacant land: none. Existing buildings: must exceed 100% of basis. | Non-rural buildings: exceed 100%. Rural buildings: exceed 50%. |
| Rural benefits | None. | 30% basis step-up after 5 years + reduced (50%) substantial-improvement requirement. |
| Zone designation | One-time fixed designation using 2010 census data. | New zones every 10 years (from July 1, 2026), stricter criteria, Governor-designated; contiguous-tract rule eliminated. |
| Reporting | Minimal (Form 8996 for the QOF; essentially none for the QOZB). | Enhanced annual reporting for QOFs and QOZBs, with penalties for noncompliance. |
The takeaway: OZ 2.0 trades the original program’s fixed sunset for permanence, introduces meaningful rural incentives, and raises the bar on reporting and zone eligibility.
Stacking Incentives
Opportunity Zone equity rarely stands alone. On larger projects, OZ equity is often combined with several other capital sources, layered into a single structure:
OZs vs. 1031 Exchanges
Both are capital-gains tools for real estate, but they shine in different situations:
Great for buying stabilized real estate.
Great for development & adaptive reuse.
Common Mistakes & Hot Topics
Opportunity Zones reward precision. The most common (and most costly) pitfalls we see:
- Improper structuring of the fund or business.
- Misunderstanding the 180-day deadline. For a direct gain, the clock runs 180 days from the sale event; for a gain from a pass-through entity, it can run 180 days from the March 15 tax deadline.
- Investing non-capital-gain dollars into a QOF — only capital gains qualify.
- Acquiring property without accounting for the substantial-improvement test.
- Failing the QOF 90% asset test.
- Combining OZ with other incentives.
- Holding vacant land.
- Lack of long-term investment planning.
- Distributions to owners of a QOF.
- QOZBs selling properties and making reinvestments.
What’s Still Unanswered
Honesty builds trust, and OZ 2.0 still has open questions the industry is watching:
- What happens to the original benefits if an existing zone loses its designation in January 2027?
- How will additional investments into original OZ projects be treated?
- For a 2026 gain, must a taxpayer wait until after Dec 31, 2026 to invest and get the OBBBA benefits?
- Will Opportunity Zone Funds be able to invest in other OZ Funds? (OBBBA didn’t address this.)
- What will the “enhanced reporting” requirements actually include?
- How will penalties apply if a QOF continually fails the 90% test?
Key Takeaways
- A powerful capital-gains tool — and now permanent.
- Specific, unforgiving requirements — details matter.
- Proper structuring is critical to capturing the benefits.
- Combines well with other tax-incentive programs.
- More Treasury guidance is coming on OZ 2.0.
- 2026 is the pivot year from OZ 1.0 to 2.0.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Qualified Opportunity Fund?
How long do I have to invest my capital gain?
How long do I need to hold the investment?
What’s the difference between OZ 1.0 and OZ 2.0?
Can I use an Opportunity Zone and a 1031 exchange together?
Do I have to invest capital gains specifically?
This article is for general informational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or investment advice. Opportunity Zone rules are complex and still evolving. Consult a qualified tax advisor before making any investment decision.