Crucial Tax Deadline Looms for Opportunity Zone Fund Investors

In addition, the IRS has just finalized more flexible opportunity zone regulations.

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Investors have less than a week to take full advantage of a key tax benefit in opportunity zone funds. They can avoid taxes on 15% of previous capital gains invested in an opportunity zone fund held for seven years only if they make that investment by Dec. 31. The reason: The deferred taxes come due by Dec. 31, 2026.

After Jan. 1, 2020, investors will be eligible for a tax cut of only 10% on those gains so long as they hold the investment for more than five years. These cuts are essentially a step-up in the tax basis of those previous gains. 

Tax cuts on previous capital gains are just one benefit of opportunity zone funds. The other is the tax cut on gains made from investments in opportunity zone funds themselves. If those investments are held for at least 10 years, their basis moves up to fair market value when they are  sold or exchanged, which essentially eliminates any capital gains tax on the investment.

The tax benefits of investments in opportunity zone funds have received a lot of attention since they are the lure to attract money that can then be invested in economically depressed communities. Whether these funds will have a positive impact on those communities or on the portfolios of investors is as yet unknown and not just because of their long-term nature.

There have been multiple reports about political favoritism in the designation of opportunity zones, which has prompted calls for investigations by various members of Congress and the introduction of bills requiring more disclosure about investments in opportunity zone funds. One legislator, Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., has even introduced a bill that would remove opportunity zones from the U.S. tax code, essentially killing their tax advantages.

In the meantime, the IRS recently finalized regulations for opportunity zone funds that provide more flexibility for investors.

Here are some of the key changes included in the IRS’s 544-page document:

“These new regulations provide much-needed clarity for communities and investors alike, and will facilitate stronger levels of investment across a range of local needs in designated communities,” said John Lettieri, president and CEO of the Economic Innovation Group, which is credited with developing the idea of opportunity zone funds and selling it to the White House, in a statement. “The final rules include several significant improvements designed to make it easier to use opportunity zones for the purposes Congress intended.”

Among those significant improvements are the rules concerning investments in brownfields, and the longer safe harbor provision for startup companies, according to Michael Krueger, an attorney at Newmeyer Dillion who represents investors, developers, fund managers and brokerage firms involved in opportunity zone projects.

As a result, he expects more investments in brownfields, often located in blighted areas, and potentially in tech-related projects that address climate change. The next Tesla or creator of the next electric car battery needs a long lead time, explained Krueger. 

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