Opportunity Zone Funds

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Reinvest capital gains into a Qualified Opportunity Fund to defer tax now and — after a 10-year hold — may exclude tax on the fund's appreciation entirely.

Overview

Opportunity Zones, created by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, let investors roll capital gains from any source into a Qualified Opportunity Fund (QOF) — deferring tax on the original gain and, after a 10-year hold, owing no tax on the fund's own appreciation.

Unlike a 1031 exchange, an Opportunity Zone investment doesn't require like-kind real estate — the gain can come from selling stock, a business, or property. Investors have 180 days from realizing a gain to reinvest it into a Qualified Opportunity Fund, which in turn invests in real estate or businesses located in one of the 8,700-plus designated low-income census tracts.

The headline benefit is the back-end: hold the QOF investment for at least 10 years and any appreciation in the fund is permanently excluded from capital gains tax. The original deferred gain is a separate matter and is recognized on its statutory schedule. Because the rules are date-sensitive and have evolved, Opportunity Zone investing should always be coordinated with your CPA.

How it works
01

Realize a capital gain

From any source — real estate, stock, a business sale. Only the gain (not the full proceeds) needs to be reinvested.

02

Invest within 180 days

Roll the gain into a Qualified Opportunity Fund within 180 days of realizing it.

03

Fund deploys into the zone

The QOF invests in qualifying real estate or operating businesses within designated Opportunity Zones, typically development or value-add projects.

04

Hold 10 years, exit potentially tax-free

After a 10-year hold, appreciation in the QOF investment is excluded from capital gains tax on exit.

Timeline

The Opportunity Zone timeline

Coordinate exact dates and current rules with your CPA
Day 0

Realize a capital gain

From any source — property, stock, or a business sale. Only the gain must be reinvested.

Within 180 days

Invest in a QOF

Roll the gain into a Qualified Opportunity Fund to defer tax on the original gain.

10-year hold

potentially tax-free appreciation

Hold the QOF investment at least 10 years and the fund's appreciation is excluded from capital gains tax on exit.

Benefits

Deferral of the original gain

Tax on the rolled-in gain is deferred under the program's schedule, keeping more capital invested up front.

potentially tax-free appreciation

The signature benefit: after 10 years, the QOF's own gains can be excluded from federal capital gains tax.

Any gain qualifies

Unlike 1031, the gain need not come from real estate — stock or business-sale gains qualify too.

Community impact

Capital is directed to designated communities, aligning return potential with revitalization.

Considerations & risks

Long, illiquid hold

The 10-year requirement makes QOFs a long-term, illiquid commitment; early exit forfeits the core benefit.

Development risk

Many QOFs pursue ground-up or value-add projects, which carry execution, lease-up, and cost risk.

Date-sensitive rules

Deferral timing and program provisions are set by statute and have changed; verify current rules with your CPA.

Concentration

Zone-eligible geographies and project types are constrained, which can limit diversification.

Compare

Opportunity Zone fund vs. 1031 exchange

Opportunity Zone fund vs. 1031 exchange
FeatureOpportunity Zone fund1031 exchange
Source of gainAny capital gainReal estate only
ReinvestThe gain onlyAll net proceeds
Window180 days45 / 180 days
Back-end benefit10-yr appreciation potentially tax-freeContinued deferral; step-up at death
AssetQOF (zone real estate/business)Like-kind real estate / DST
LiquidityIlliquid, ~10 yrsIlliquid

Simplified; both are subject to detailed IRS rules. Not tax advice.

Executive summary audio

Current-law source reviewed July 11, 2026: IRS Opportunity Zone guidance and IRS Notice 2026-40. Opportunity Zone benefits are conditional, time-sensitive, and dependent on the QOF, the taxpayer, the holding period, and current law; confirm the details with your CPA and attorney.