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Strategy Comparison

Opportunity Zone vs. 1031 vs. Cash Out

Three ways to handle a large capital gain. Compare cashing out and paying tax, deferring through a 1031 exchange, or investing the gain in an Opportunity Zone fund.

Jerry Baker · Updated June 2026 · Free interactive tool
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Your gain & assumptions

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Strategy comparison

Cash out & pay tax

After — years
Pay tax now, invest what's left. Simplest, but the smallest base compounding.

1031 exchange

After — years
Defer all tax; the full gain keeps compounding in real estate. A step-up at death can erase the deferred tax.

Opportunity Zone

After — years
Invest the gain in a QOF: the deferred gain tax comes due later, and the fund's appreciation can be tax-free after the required hold.
Opportunity Zone rules changed under 2025 legislation. Deferral dates, basis step-up, and holding-period requirements have shifted — treat the OZ figure as illustrative and confirm current law with your tax advisor before relying on it. All three results are simplified estimates at a fixed assumed return and ignore taxes on interim growth.
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Three strategies

Cash out, exchange, or Opportunity Zone?

When you sell a property or other appreciated asset, you face three broad choices for what to do with the capital gain. Each trades simplicity, flexibility, and tax efficiency differently.

  • Cash out. Pay the capital-gains tax now — federal long-term rate plus net investment income tax (NIIT) plus any state levy — and invest whatever is left. The math is simple, but you start compounding on a smaller base because a significant portion goes to the IRS immediately.
  • 1031 exchange. Reinvest the full gain into like-kind replacement property and the tax is deferred indefinitely. The entire gain keeps compounding in real estate. At death, heirs may receive a step-up in basis that effectively erases the deferred tax.
  • Opportunity Zone fund (QOF). Invest the capital gain in a Qualified Opportunity Fund. The original gain's tax is deferred, and appreciation inside the fund can be entirely tax-free after the required holding period — though OZ rules carry their own timeline and complexity. Legislation in 2025 changed certain deferral dates and basis step-up provisions; confirm current requirements with your tax advisor.

Reading the calculator

The tool applies a single annual return to all three strategies and shows where each ends after your chosen hold period. The 1031 exchange wins on raw dollars because the full gain compounds untaxed throughout. The OZ result reflects the gain growing for the full period and then the original gain tax coming due at the end. The cash-out result begins from a smaller base — the gain net of tax — and compounds from there.

These are simplified illustrations. They use a flat return, ignore interim distributions and reinvestment taxes, and do not model depreciation, debt leverage, or the stepped-up basis benefit of a 1031 held until death. Use the numbers to orient your thinking, then work with a CPA and a qualified intermediary before choosing a path.

Educational estimate only. This tool is for general illustration and is not tax, legal, or investment advice. It uses simplifying assumptions and the figures you enter, which may not reflect your situation or current law; depreciation recapture, net investment income tax, state taxes, and other items can change the result materially. Opportunity Zone rules changed in 2025 — treat OZ figures as illustrative only. Figures are illustrative and not guaranteed. Consult your own qualified tax and legal advisors before acting. Not an offer or solicitation. DST interests are sold only to accredited investors via private placement memorandum. Securities offered through Aurora Securities, Inc. (ASI), member FINRA/SIPC; Baker 1031 Investments is independent of ASI.

Frequently asked questions

What's the core difference between these?

Cash out pays tax now and invests what's left. A 1031 defers the tax and keeps the full amount compounding in real estate. An Opportunity Zone fund defers the tax and can make the new investment's appreciation tax-free after a long hold — but with its own rules and timeline.

Which defers the most tax?

Both 1031 and Opportunity Zone funds let the full gain keep working. A 1031 can defer indefinitely — and a step-up at death may erase it; OZ adds potential tax-free growth on the new investment after the required hold.

Are these assumptions current?

Opportunity Zone law changed in 2025. Treat the OZ figures as illustrative and confirm current deferral dates, step-up, and holding requirements with your advisor.

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