Fort Worth Opportunity Zones
Fort Worth, Texas has 47 census tracts eligible for OZ 2.0 designation. Demographics, eligible tract list, and state filing tracker.
How OZ 2.0 applies to Fort Worth
Fort Worth sits within Texas, which is running its own OZ 2.0 selection process under the federal framework. The state's lead agency is Economic Development & Tourism Office (EDT), Office of the Governor. Texas has 2,420 census tracts eligible under OZ 2.0 — it can nominate up to 605 to Treasury.
47 of those tracts are inside Fort Worth. OZ 2.0's tightened eligibility criteria — median family income at or below 70% of the state/metro reference (down from 80% under OZ 1.0), with the contiguous-tract option eliminated — means fewer Fort Worth neighborhoods qualify than under the 2018 OZ 1.0 map. How states choose OZ 2.0 tracts →
For investors targeting Fort Worth, the OZ 2.0 tax benefits — rolling 5-year deferral, 10% basis step-up (or 30% for Rural QROFs in qualifying rural tracts), and 100% federal-tax-free exclusion of QOF appreciation after a 10-year hold — apply to investments made on or after January 1, 2027. See the full OZ 1.0 vs 2.0 comparison →
What Fort Worth's demographics imply: with a median household income of $75,759 and a 12.5% poverty rate, Fort Worth is likely to retain a meaningful share of designated tracts in higher-poverty census areas, while higher-income neighborhoods that qualified through the contiguous-tract pathway under OZ 1.0 will lose designation under OZ 2.0.
Next steps for Fort Worth investors
- See Texas's full OZ 2.0 selection process + filing tracker →
- Browse Qualified Opportunity Funds investing in Texas →
- Open the OZ 2.0 eligibility map and look up Fort Worth addresses →
- Model your OZ 2.0 tax savings on a Fort Worth-area investment →
- National OZ 2.0 filing tracker — see where every state stands →
Guides — read before you invest
Get notified when Texas files
One email the moment Texas's governor submits OZ 2.0 nominations. We'll flag whether Fort Worth tracts made the list.