What Happens After an Opportunity Zone Project Stabilizes?
by: Adam Horowitz
Stabilization Is Not the Finish Line
Many Opportunity Zone developers treat stabilization as the main goal.
Construction is complete. Leasing is established. The asset begins producing income. From the outside, the project may look like it has reached the finish line.
But for many sponsors, stabilization creates the next major decision point.
The sponsor now has to determine how the asset should be capitalized, who should remain in the ownership structure, whether permanent financing is available, and whether investors need liquidity.
For Opportunity Zone projects, stabilization is not the end of the strategy. It is the moment when the next capital decision begins.
A Stabilized Asset Does Not Automatically Have a Solved Capital Stack
Stabilization reduces development risk, but it does not automatically solve the capital structure.
A project may still have construction debt, bridge debt, or other short-term financing that needs to be replaced. The asset may need permanent financing, capital improvements, debt paydown, reserves, or a recapitalization. Investors may also have different goals after the project is complete.
Some investors may want to remain in the asset for the long-term Opportunity Zone strategy. Others may want liquidity. The developer may want to exit, stay involved, or reduce exposure while preserving some upside.
That means stabilization does not only mark the end of construction. It can also expose the next capital structure question.
Why Post-Stabilization Planning Matters More for OZ Projects
Opportunity Zone projects are different from ordinary multifamily developments because the ownership structure may be tied to tax timing, investor requirements, and long-term hold goals.
A sponsor may need to consider whether OZ investors remain in the asset, whether non-OZ investors need to be bought out, whether the developer stays in the deal, and whether the capital stack supports the intended hold strategy.
A simple refinance or sale may not always solve the problem.
The right answer depends on the asset, the investors, the debt position, and the long-term strategy. For OZ sponsors, the post-stabilization decision is not only about the real estate. It is also about the structure around the real estate.
Permanent Financing May Be the First Step
After stabilization, many sponsors look to permanent financing as the next step.
Permanent financing may help replace construction debt, lower risk, extend the hold period, and create a more stable capital structure. It can be an important part of moving the asset from development to long-term ownership.
But permanent financing may not solve every need.
The new loan may not be large enough to fully pay off existing debt. The asset may need more operating history. The lender may size proceeds conservatively. The sponsor may still need capital for improvements, reserves, investor liquidity, or debt paydown.
In those situations, refinancing may be part of the answer, but not the whole answer.
Stabilization Can Create an Investor Liquidity Moment
Once an Opportunity Zone project stabilizes, the ownership group may need to be reorganized.
Some investors may want to continue holding the asset. Others may want to exit. Non-OZ investors may have different timing needs than OZ investors. The developer may want to remain involved, but not necessarily in the same position as during construction.
This can create several possible paths.
The sponsor may pursue a full sale, partial sale, preferred equity, structured equity, recapitalization, investor buyout, developer buyout, or long-term hold with permanent financing.
The important point is that stabilization gives the sponsor a clearer basis for making those decisions. The asset has operating performance. The value is easier to underwrite. The capital needs are more visible.
Where Forward Purchase Structures Can Fit
A forward purchase structure can help define what happens after the asset stabilizes before the project reaches that point.
Instead of waiting until completion to find a buyer or capital partner, the sponsor can create a future transaction framework earlier in the process.
At stabilization, the asset can be valued based on stabilized fair market value. The forward structure can then allow for different outcomes, such as a full purchase by a long-term capital partner, a partial purchase where the developer remains involved, a buyout of non-OZ investors, or a transition into a longer-term stabilized ownership structure.
The value of a forward purchase is not only the future acquisition. It is the certainty it can create before stabilization.
For developers, that certainty can support planning, investor conversations, and the transition from construction to long-term ownership.
The Right Solution Depends on the Asset
Forward purchase structures are one possible solution, but they are not the only one.
Depending on the project, the sponsor may consider permanent refinancing, preferred equity, structured equity, mezzanine capital, debt paydown capital, recapitalization, partial sale, full sale, developer buyout, or investor buyout.
The right capital solution should match the asset’s operating profile, the investor base, the debt position, and the long-term Opportunity Zone strategy.
For some projects, the best path may be a refinance. For others, it may be a forward purchase structure. For others, it may be preferred equity or a broader recapitalization.
The key is to build the plan before the sponsor is forced into a narrow set of options.
How Lever Can Help
Lever Capital Partners helps Opportunity Zone sponsors evaluate what happens after stabilization.
That includes reviewing permanent financing options, debt paydown needs, preferred equity, recapitalization strategies, forward purchase structures, and investor liquidity considerations.
Lever can help sponsors compare available paths, prepare the capital story, and connect with capital providers that understand Opportunity Zone multifamily, stabilized assets, and the transition from development to long-term ownership.
For sponsors, the goal is not just to reach stabilization. The goal is to make sure the capital structure is ready for what comes next.
The Bottom Line
An Opportunity Zone project may be built, leased, and operating, but that does not mean the capital strategy is complete.
After stabilization, sponsors still need to decide how the asset will be financed, who will remain in the deal, whether investors need liquidity, and whether the ownership structure supports the long-term OZ strategy.
For OZ sponsors, stabilization is not just the end of development. It is the beginning of the next capital decision.