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Qualified Opportunity Zone Designation 2027: OBBBA Changes Explained

What is the qualified opportunity zone designation process for 2027? Rev. Proc. 2026-14 sets the procedure for State CEOs to nominate census tracts as QOZs effective January 1, 2027 — implementing the OBBBA’s overhaul of Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2, which now includes a new Qualified Rural Opportunity Fund (QROF) category and a flexible “applicable start date” replacing the fixed December 31, 2017 cutoff.

If you’ve been waiting for clarity on the next round of Opportunity Zones, it’s here. Rev. Proc. 2026-14 — issued by the IRS in April 2026 — provides the procedural roadmap for the qualified opportunity zone designation process effective January 1, 2027, implementing the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s (OBBBA) significant amendments to Sections 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 that took effect July 4, 2025.

At SW Accounting & Consulting Corp, we work with QOF sponsors, real estate developers, and high-net-worth investors who use OZ deferral for capital gain planning. This guide breaks down what Rev. Proc. 2026-14 actually does, what’s new under OBBBA, and what state CEOs and prospective fund managers need to know now.

What does Rev. Proc. 2026-14 cover for qualified opportunity zone designation? 📋

Rev. Proc. 2026-14 provides procedural guidance to State CEOs (and the territories and DC) for nominating low-income community population census tracts to be designated as QOZs effective January 1, 2027 — a fresh designation cycle, not an extension of the original 2018-2027 QOZs.

The legal framework rests on three pieces:

  • Section 1400Z-1 — defines what a QOZ is and how it’s designated.
  • Section 1400Z-2 — provides the temporary deferral, basis step-up, and exclusion benefits for taxpayers who roll capital gains into a Qualified Opportunity Fund (QOF).
  • Section 70421 of OBBBA (P.L. 119-21) — substantially amended both 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2 effective July 4, 2025, creating the new QOZ regime that Rev. Proc. 2026-14 implements.

The original TCJA (2017) QOZs are technically referenced in the Rev. Proc. as “prior § 1400Z-1” and “prior § 1400Z-2” — distinguishing them from the OBBBA-amended provisions that govern post-2026 designations.

What did OBBBA change about QOZ rules? 🔄

OBBBA’s key amendments include a new Qualified Rural Opportunity Fund (QROF) category, a flexible “applicable start date” replacing the static December 31, 2017 reference, and a re-designation cycle giving state CEOs a new nomination window.

ItemPre-OBBBA (TCJA)Post-OBBBA (Effective 2027)
Acquisition cutoffAfter December 31, 2017After “applicable start date” (per § 1400Z-1(e)(2))
Rural-focused fund categoryNot separately definedQROF — Qualified Rural Opportunity Fund (new)
State nominations2018 designation cycle completeNew designation cycle for 1/1/2027 effectiveness
“Rural area” definitionN/AOutside cities/towns >50,000 inhabitants and contiguous urbanized areas
Effective date for QROF amendmentsN/AQOF investments after December 31, 2026
💡 Expert Insight
The QROF carve-out is a meaningful planning opportunity. To qualify, the fund must hold at least 90% of its assets in QOZ business property substantially used in a QOZ “comprised entirely of a rural area” — or in QOZ stock/partnership interests in a business that is rural-focused. The OBBBA provides enhanced benefits (e.g., faster basis step-up timing) for QROFs. Investors interested in agricultural, rural broadband, or rural healthcare projects should track this carefully.

How does the State CEO nomination process work? 🏛

State CEOs nominate eligible low-income community (LIC) census tracts; the Treasury Secretary then certifies and designates them as QOZs. The number of tracts designated per state is limited per § 1400Z-1(d).

The process under Rev. Proc. 2026-14 follows § 1400Z-1(b)(1):

  1. State CEO identifies eligible LICs as defined in § 1400Z-1(c)(1) (which references the New Markets Tax Credit definition in § 45D(e)).
  2. State CEO submits a list of nominated tracts to the IRS following the procedures in Rev. Proc. 2026-14.
  3. The Treasury Secretary (or delegate) reviews and certifies the nominations.
  4. Designated tracts become effective QOZs as of January 1, 2027.
  5. Designation period and re-designation cycles continue per the OBBBA-amended § 1400Z-1(d) limits.

For the 2018 round, the original TCJA designations covered roughly 8,700 census tracts. The 2027 round will follow updated 2020-Census-based LIC data, which will redraw eligibility maps in many states — particularly important for areas where economic conditions shifted significantly since 2018.

What does this mean for QOF investors and sponsors? 💰

2026 is a transition year — existing TCJA-era QOZs continue under prior rules, while the post-2027 round will operate under OBBBA-amended rules. Sponsors should distinguish between investments in old vs. new QOZs and align fund structures accordingly.

Key planning items for QOF sponsors:

  • Track designation announcements. States are expected to begin nominations in 2026; the official 2027 QOZ map will not be final until Treasury certifies. Don’t commit capital to specific tracts until designation is confirmed.
  • Distinguish old vs. new QOZs. Existing QOZs continue under prior § 1400Z-1/-2; new ones will follow OBBBA amendments. Some properties may be in both old and new QOZs; some may be in only one.
  • Consider QROF structuring. If your investment thesis is rural-focused, a QROF may unlock enhanced benefits — but watch the 90% rural-area test and the December 31, 2026 effective date for QROF amendments.
  • Update LP marketing materials. Existing fund marketing decks reference TCJA QOZ rules. Add “OBBBA amendments” disclosures and clarify which rules apply to which investments.
⚠ Watch the timing windows
The 90% asset test for QOFs measures on specific dates per § 1400Z-2(d)(1)(A) and (B). For a QROF investing across the 2026/2027 boundary, you must satisfy the rural test for all measurement dates from the effective date forward. A QROF that starts as a non-rural-focused QOF and pivots later may have transition complications. Get the structure right at formation.

What about existing TCJA-era Qualified Opportunity Funds? 🔒

Existing TCJA-era QOFs continue under prior § 1400Z-1 and § 1400Z-2 rules. Investors who invested before December 31, 2026 retain their original deferral, step-up, and exclusion mechanics — including the December 31, 2026 final deferral date.

Practical implications:

  • December 31, 2026 remains the final deferral date for original-program QOFs — meaning eligible deferred gains must be recognized on that date if not previously recognized.
  • Holding-period requirements for the 10% / 15% basis step-up tracked from investment date — although for many late-2018+ investors, those step-ups have already been earned or are unattainable.
  • The 10-year hold for full exclusion of post-investment appreciation continues under prior rules.
  • QOZ designations made under TCJA remain in effect for prior-program purposes through their original designation period.

Frequently Asked Questions 🗂

Q: When do the new QOZs become effective?
A: January 1, 2027 — pending Treasury certification of state CEO nominations. Rev. Proc. 2026-14 sets the procedural framework; designation announcements will follow during 2026.
Q: What is a Qualified Rural Opportunity Fund (QROF)?
A: A new OBBBA category — a QOF that holds at least 90% of its assets in QOZ business property used substantially in a rural-area QOZ, or in QOZ stock/partnership interests of rural-focused businesses. Effective for investments after December 31, 2026. “Rural area” generally means areas outside cities/towns of more than 50,000 inhabitants and their contiguous urbanized areas.
Q: Do my existing QOF investments continue under the old rules?
A: Yes. Investments made under TCJA-era § 1400Z-1 and § 1400Z-2 continue under prior rules. The OBBBA amendments apply to QOF investments made after the effective date thresholds in OBBBA (generally after December 31, 2026 for the QROF amendments and other provisions).
Q: What is the December 31, 2026 deferral date about?
A: For original TCJA-era QOFs, December 31, 2026 is the final date for recognizing deferred gains that were rolled into a QOF. The OBBBA amendments and the 2027 designation cycle do not extend this date for prior-program investments.
Q: How do state CEOs decide which census tracts to nominate?
A: State CEOs select eligible LIC census tracts based on the criteria in § 1400Z-1(c)(1), considering economic distress indicators, alignment with state economic development priorities, and statutory limits on the number of nominations per § 1400Z-1(d). Each state’s process varies — public comment periods are common.

For the authoritative IRS revenue procedure, see Rev. Proc. 2026-14 on irs.gov/irb. The IRS Opportunity Zones overview is at irs.gov/credits-deductions/businesses/opportunity-zones. Notice 2025-50 provides the rural area definition and related guidance.

Need help structuring a QOF, QROF, or evaluating an OZ investment? SW Accounting & Consulting Corp’s tax planning team works with sponsors and high-net-worth investors — book a consultation.

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