The following questions and answers (Q&As) were prepared in response to inquiries that have been proposed to the IRS. They are intended to provide a basic understanding and awareness of Opportunity Zones.
These Q&As do not constitute legal authority and may not be relied upon as such. They do not amend, modify or add to the Income Tax Regulations or any other legal authority.
A1. A QOZ is an economically distressed community where new investments, under certain conditions, may be eligible for preferential tax treatment. Localities qualify as QOZs if they were nominated for that designation by a state, the District of Columbia, or a U.S. territory and that nomination was certified by the Secretary of the U.S. Treasury via his delegation of authority to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
A2. QOZs were added to the tax code by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on December 22, 2017.
A3. No. The first set of QOZ designations, covering parts of 18 states, were designated on April 9, 2018. QOZs have been designated to cover parts of all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and 5 U.S. territories.
A4. QOZs are an economic development tool—that is, they are designed to spur economic development and job creation in distressed communities.
A5. QOZs are designed to spur economic development by providing tax incentives for investors who invest new capital in businesses operating in one or more QOZs.
A6. No. You can take advantage of these tax incentives even if you don’t live, work, or have an existing business in a QOZ. All you need to do is invest the amount of a recognized eligible gain in a QOF and elect to defer the tax on that gain.
A7. Yes. The list of each QOZ can be found in IRS Notices 2018-48 PDF and 2019-42 PDF . Further, a visual map of the census tracts designated as QOZs may be found at Opportunity Zones Resources.
A8. The numbers are identifiers for the population census tracts developed by the U.S. Census Bureau that are designated as QOZs.
A9. You can find 11-digit census tract numbers, also known as GEOIDs, using the U.S. Census Bureau’s Geocoder. After entering the street address, select Public_AR_Current in the Benchmark dropdown menu and Census2010_Current in the Vintage dropdown menu, and click Find. In the Census Tracts section, you’ll find the number after GEOID.
A10. A QOF is an investment vehicle that files either a partnership or corporate federal income tax return and is organized for the purpose of investing in QOZ property.
A11. Gains that may be deferred are called “eligible gains.” They include both capital gains and qualified 1231 gains, but only gains that would be recognized for federal income tax purposes before January 1, 2027, and that are not from a transaction with a related person. For you to obtain this deferral, the amount of the eligible gain must be timely invested in a QOF in exchange for an equity interest in the QOF (qualifying investment). Once you have done this, you can claim the deferral on your federal income tax return for the taxable year in which the gain would be recognized if you do not defer it.
A12. In general, qualified 1231 gains are gains reported on Form 4797, Part I. For additional information, see instructions for Forms 8949 and 4797.
A13. Yes, this gain is an eligible gain. You may elect to defer the tax on the amount of the eligible gain invested in a QOF. If you only invest part of your eligible gain in a QOF, you can elect to defer tax on only the part of the eligible gain that was invested in this way. See Notice 2021-10 PDF for a special rule if the last day of your 180-day period was on or after April 1, 2020, and before March 31, 2021.
A14. You may make an election to defer the gain, in whole or in part, when filing your federal income tax return. That is, you may make the election on the return on which the tax on that gain would be due if you do not defer it. For additional information, see How To Report an Election To Defer Tax on Eligible Gain Invested in a QOF in the Form 8949 instructions.
A15. Yes. You can elect to defer the amount of 1231 gain if the amount of the gain was invested in a QOF during the 180-day period that begins on the day the 1231 gain was realized. For proper reporting of this gain, see instructions for Forms 8949 and 4797. If your 1231 gain was realized in 2019, your 180-day period may begin on December 31, 2019.
A16. Yes, but you will need to file an amended return. An individual or a married couple uses Form 1040-X for this purpose and attaches Form 8949.
A17. Yes. All of your eligible gains from installment sales are eligible for deferral, to the extent they are timely invested in a QOF. The 180-day period during which to invest in a QOF begins on the day the installment payment is received, even if the installment sale giving rise to the gain took place prior to December 2017.
A18. Because your installment sale took place after 2017, if you elect installment treatment for your sale, you have two options for how to defer gain.
A19. Yes. You can transfer property other than cash to a QOF. However, a transfer of non-cash property may result in only part of the investment being a qualifying investment (that is, only part of the investment can benefit from the QOZ tax incentives). Specifically, the amount of gain that can be deferred is limited to the basis of the contributed property, even if a greater value of property is transferred.
A20. Yes. Nonresident alien individuals and foreign corporations may generally elect to defer eligible gains that are otherwise subject to federal income tax in their hands. For example, this includes gains that are effectively connected to a U.S. trade or business and capital gains from the disposition of a U.S. real property interest by a nonresident alien individual or a foreign corporation. If the gain would be exempt from federal income tax under an applicable income tax treaty, the foreign person must waive any treaty benefits in order to elect to defer the gain.
A21. No. Your holding period of property transferred to a QOF doesn’t transfer to your qualifying investment in the QOF for purposes of the QOZ tax incentives.
A22. Generally, you have 180 days to invest an eligible gain in a QOF. The first day of the 180-day period is the date the gain would be recognized for federal income tax purposes if you did not elect to defer the recognition of the gain.
A23. The date on which you receive a K-1 notifying you of the eligible gain is not relevant. Partners in a partnership, shareholders of an S corporation, and beneficiaries of estates and non-grantor trusts have the option to start the 180-day investment period on any of the following dates:
A24. For RIC or REIT capital gain dividends, you can choose for the 180-day period with respect to eligible gain to begin either on the last day of your taxable year in which you would otherwise recognize the capital gain dividend (December 31, 2019) or on the date of the dividend distribution, December 10, 2019.
A25. Yes, but only to the extent you made a proper deferral election with respect to your investment (that is, only to the extent that your investment in the QOF is a qualifying investment).
A26. Yes. In addition to the basis increase rules for sales of qualifying QOF interests held for at least 10 years, the holder of a qualifying investment (with respect to that investment) may elect to exclude all gains and losses generated from the sales of assets by that QOF or certain lower-tier partnerships owned by the QOF. This is permitted, however, only if all of the following requirements are satisfied:
A27. No, provided that you only received a qualifying investment in the new partnership as a result of the merger. There may be gain recognition under the QOZ rules if you received other property as part of the merger.
A28. A profits interest received in exchange for services is not a qualifying investment in a QOF. If the profits interest is held in a separate partnership, even one that is controlled by you, it will not affect your separate qualifying investment.
A29. No. Ordinary gain is not eligible for deferral. Therefore, your QOF investment wasn’t a qualifying investment made in connection with a proper deferral election. For this reason, the basis adjustment to fair market value isn’t available for that investment. This type of investment is called a non-qualifying investment. (It is a mixed-funds investment if the taxpayer directly holds both a non-qualifying investment and a qualifying investment in the same QOF.)
A30. An investor must include the remaining deferred gain on the earlier of an inclusion event or December 31, 2026. The amount of deferred gain included in income depends on (i) the fair market value of your qualifying investment in the QOF on the date of the inclusion event and (ii) adjustments to the tax basis of that qualifying investment.
A31. An inclusion event, in general, is an event that reduces or terminates your qualifying investment in a QOF.
A32. When the QOF liquidated, the deferral period ended. You must include the deferred gain in the taxable year during which your QOF liquidated. When you file your federal income tax return for that year, you must report the gain on Form 8949 and must reflect the change to your QOF investment on the Form 8997. See instructions for Forms 8949 and 8997.
A33. Yes. Giving away your qualifying investment in the QOF is an inclusion event, which ends the deferral period. When you file your federal income tax return, you must report the deferred gain related to the QOF investment. Your child has a non-qualifying investment. See instructions for Forms 8949 and 8997.
A34. No. Because you are treated as the owner of the trust for federal income tax purposes (that is, because it is a grantor trust), the transfer is not an inclusion event and so does not end the deferral period. A transfer of a qualifying investment to a non-grantor trust is an inclusion event, which ends the deferral period.
A35. Transferring your qualifying investment to your spouse was an inclusion event, which ended the deferral period. When you file your federal income tax return for the year of the divorce, you must report the gain and the change to your qualifying investment. Your spouse has a non-qualifying investment in the QOF. See instructions for Forms 8949 and 8997.
A36. Yes. Subject to an exception for certain partnership merger transactions, the distribution that you received from your QOF partnership is an inclusion event to the extent that the distributed property has a fair market value in excess of your basis in your qualifying investment. However, this inclusion event does not prevent you from excluding from gross income any gains with respect to the remaining qualifying investment if you hold it for at least 10 years and subsequently make an election with respect to that investment. See Q&As 5 and 26.
A37. A QOF is an investment vehicle that files either a partnership or corporate federal income tax return, is organized for the purpose of investing in QOZ property and elects to self-certify as a Qualified Opportunity Fund.
A38. To become a QOF, an eligible corporation or partnership elects to self-certify by annually filing Form 8996 with its federal income tax return. See Form 8996 instructions. The return with the Form 8996 must be filed timely, taking extensions into account.
A39. Yes. An LLC that chooses to be treated either as a partnership or corporation for federal income tax purposes and is organized for the purpose of investing in QOZ property can be a QOF.
A40. QOZ property is a QOF’s qualifying ownership interest in a corporation or partnership that operates a QOZ business in a QOZ or certain tangible property of the QOF that is used in a business in the QOZ. To be a qualifying ownership interest in a corporation or partnership,
A41. No. For a QOF, working capital is not QOZ Stock, QOZ Partnership interest or QOZ Business Property and therefore it is not QOZ property.
A42. No. However, for a cash contribution received in the 6 month period before a QOF property testing date that is held in cash or cash equivalents, the QOF may choose to exclude from both the numerator and denominator of the first investment standard test calculation following the contribution.
A43. Tangible property is QOZ business property if--
A44. Yes. The building is QOZ business property, if it meets the following requirements:
The contributed land on which the building is located, however, is not QOZ business property because it was not purchased by the QOF.
A45. This depends on the facts and circumstances. In this regard, significant physical work does not include preliminary activities such as planning or designing, securing financing, exploring, or researching. For example, if a factory is to be constructed on a site, preliminary activities include clearing or testing of soil condition. On the other hand, significant physical work begins, for example, when work starts on the excavation of footings or the pouring of pads for the factory.
A46. Yes. If the parties to the lease are unrelated, the leased property can qualify as QOZ business property only if—
In addition, if the parties to the lease are related—
A47. Original use of tangible property occurs when the property is first placed in service in a manner that would start depreciation or amortization if the property were being used in a trade or business. The original use of tangible property is in a QOZ if the property has not previously been placed in service in the QOZ. Thus, tangible property that had been placed in service outside of the QOZ (that is, used property) can be original use property if the QOF or QOZ business is the first to place it in service in the QOZ.
A48. Vacant property (including a building) is original use property if—
A49. Property is substantially improved if, during any 30-month period beginning after the property is acquired, additions to the basis of the property exceed an amount equal to the adjusted basis at the start of the 30-month period.
A50. If tangible property is undergoing improvement and its basis has not yet been doubled but the QOF reasonably believes that the property will be QOZ business property after improvements are completed, then during the 30-month substantial improvement period, the property counts as substantially improved.
A51. If a building is used in the active conduct of a trade or business, you generally do not need to substantially improve the parcel of land on which the building is located. However, if the land is unimproved or minimally improved, the land must be substantially improved. Moreover, the land fails to be QOZ business property if it was purchased with an expectation that it would not to be improved by more than an insubstantial amount.
A52. QOZ business property is tangible property owned or leased by a QOF or QOZ business that satisfies a variety of criteria. These criteria include requirements that, during substantially all of the time in which the QOF or QOZ business holds or leases the tangible property, substantially all of the use of that property by the QOF or QOZ business must be in a QOZ. The first of these two “substantially all” references means at least 90 percent, and the second means at least 70 percent. Thus, during at least 90 percent of the time in which the QOF or QOZ business holds or leases the tangible property, at least 70 percent of the use of that property by the QOF or QOZ business must be in a QOZ. Applying these two definitions together means that, during the entire time in which the QOF or QOZ business owns or leases tangible property, at least 63% of the use of that tangible property must be in a QOZ.
A53. Yes. Mobile tangible property, such as your landscaping equipment, can qualify as QOZ business property. Because you use your landscaping equipment in multiple census tracts, you must aggregate the number of days you use the tangible property in various census tracts. Generally, if you used your landscaping equipment at least 70% of the days in QOZs, your landscaping equipment is substantially used in a QOZ. In addition, based on the way you use your landscaping equipment in your business, if you always return your landscaping equipment back to the building at least every 14 days, you qualify for a safe harbor that allows you to exclude up to 20% of your landscaping equipment from this 70% calculation. See Form 8996 instructions.
A54. Yes. Inventory (including raw materials) can qualify as QOZ business property. In addition, you may choose annually to exclude inventory from QOZ business property and from the denominator of the applicable determination (whether 90 percent or 70 percent). During each taxable year, whether you choose to include or exclude inventory from both QOZ business property and the denominator, you must treat all of your inventory consistently during that taxable year.
A55. Yes. If inventory of a QOF or QOZ business, including raw materials, is in transit, the inventory can qualify as QOZ business property. That is, inventory does not fail to qualify solely because the inventory is in transit from a vendor to a QOF or QOZ business or from a QOF or QOZ business to a customer.