Tag: capital gains tax

  • Capital Gains Tax 2026: Rates, Rules, and How to Minimize What You Owe

    When you sell an investment for more than you paid for it, the profit is called a capital gain — and the IRS wants a cut. Understanding how capital gains tax works can save you thousands of dollars over your lifetime as an investor.

    This guide covers the 2026 capital gains tax rates, the difference between short-term and long-term gains, and proven strategies to legally minimize what you owe.

    What Is Capital Gains Tax?

    Capital gains tax is the tax you pay on profit from selling a capital asset — stocks, bonds, mutual funds, ETFs, real estate, cryptocurrency, and other investments. The gain is the difference between what you paid (your cost basis) and what you sold it for.

    Example: You bought 100 shares of a stock at $50 each ($5,000 total). You sold them for $80 each ($8,000 total). Your capital gain is $3,000. That $3,000 is what gets taxed.

    Short-Term vs. Long-Term Capital Gains

    The most important factor in how your gains are taxed is how long you held the asset before selling.

    Short-Term Capital Gains

    Assets held for one year or less generate short-term capital gains. These are taxed as ordinary income — the same as your salary — at rates ranging from 10% to 37% depending on your total taxable income.

    Long-Term Capital Gains

    Assets held for more than one year generate long-term capital gains. These are taxed at preferential rates: 0%, 15%, or 20%, depending on your income. Most investors pay 15%.

    2026 Long-Term Capital Gains Tax Rates

    Filing Status 0% Rate 15% Rate 20% Rate
    Single Up to $47,025 $47,026–$518,900 Over $518,900
    Married Filing Jointly Up to $94,050 $94,051–$583,750 Over $583,750
    Head of Household Up to $63,000 $63,001–$551,350 Over $551,350

    Note: Thresholds are approximate based on 2026 projections with inflation adjustments. Verify with IRS publications or a tax professional for exact figures.

    Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT)

    High-income investors may also owe the Net Investment Income Tax — a 3.8% surtax on investment income including capital gains, dividends, and interest. It applies to the lesser of your net investment income or the amount by which your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) exceeds:

    • $200,000 for single filers
    • $250,000 for married filing jointly

    Combined with the 20% top rate, high earners can face an effective capital gains rate of 23.8%.

    Capital Gains on Real Estate

    The sale of a primary residence has special rules. If you have owned and lived in the home for at least 2 of the last 5 years, you can exclude up to:

    • $250,000 in gains if filing single
    • $500,000 in gains if married filing jointly

    Gains above the exclusion are subject to regular long-term capital gains rates. If you have rented the property, depreciation recapture rules apply — the depreciation you claimed is taxed at up to 25%.

    Capital Gains on Cryptocurrency

    The IRS treats cryptocurrency as property, not currency. Every sale, trade, or use of crypto to purchase goods or services is a taxable event. Short-term gains from crypto held under a year are taxed as ordinary income. Long-term gains qualify for preferential rates.

    Strategies to Minimize Capital Gains Tax

    Hold Investments for More Than One Year

    The simplest strategy: wait until you have held an investment for over 12 months before selling. The difference between short-term and long-term rates can be substantial. Selling a position at day 364 vs. day 366 could cost you thousands in extra taxes.

    Tax-Loss Harvesting

    If you have losing positions in your portfolio, selling them generates a capital loss that offsets your capital gains. If losses exceed gains, you can deduct up to $3,000 against ordinary income per year, with unused losses carrying forward to future years.

    Example: You realize $10,000 in gains and $7,000 in losses. Your net taxable gain is $3,000 instead of $10,000.

    Be aware of the wash-sale rule: you cannot buy the same or “substantially identical” security within 30 days before or after the sale and still claim the loss.

    Use Tax-Advantaged Accounts

    Investments held in a Roth IRA, traditional IRA, or 401(k) grow tax-free or tax-deferred. There is no capital gains tax on sales inside these accounts. Placing your highest-return investments in tax-advantaged accounts is a powerful long-term strategy.

    Stay in the 0% Capital Gains Bracket

    If your taxable income is below $47,025 (single) or $94,050 (married), you pay 0% on long-term capital gains. This is an opportunity to harvest gains in lower-income years (early retirement, gap years, years with large deductions) without triggering any tax.

    Qualified Opportunity Zone Investments

    Investing capital gains in a Qualified Opportunity Fund (QOF) can defer and potentially reduce your tax liability. You defer the gain until the earlier of the date you sell the QOF investment or December 31, 2026. Gains on the QOF investment itself may be partially or fully excluded depending on how long you hold it.

    Donate Appreciated Assets to Charity

    If you donate appreciated stock directly to a qualified charity, you avoid capital gains tax entirely and can deduct the full fair market value of the donation (subject to AGI limits). This is more tax-efficient than selling the stock, paying tax, and donating the proceeds.

    Gift Appreciated Assets

    Gifting appreciated assets to family members in lower tax brackets can shift capital gains to someone who pays a lower rate — or even the 0% rate. Gift tax rules apply for large transfers ($18,000 annual exclusion per recipient in 2026).

    Capital Gains vs. Ordinary Income: A Key Planning Decision

    Understanding how capital gains interact with your other income is critical for tax planning. Capital gains “stack on top of” your ordinary income when determining your rate. This means even if you are in a low ordinary income bracket, large capital gains can push you into a higher capital gains bracket.

    Work with a tax professional or use tax planning software to model the impact of large asset sales before executing them.

    How to Report Capital Gains

    Capital gains are reported on Schedule D of your federal tax return (Form 1040). Your brokerage will send you Form 1099-B showing proceeds and cost basis for all sales. Review this form carefully — cost basis is sometimes reported incorrectly, especially for reinvested dividends and gifted securities.

    Bottom Line

    Capital gains tax is unavoidable, but it is highly manageable with the right strategies. The biggest levers are holding period (long-term vs. short-term), account type (taxable vs. tax-advantaged), and tax-loss harvesting. Start with the simplest step: always hold investments for more than one year before selling when possible. The difference in tax rates can mean keeping significantly more of your returns.

    For more on this topic, see our guide on how Qualified Opportunity Zones can defer and reduce capital gains taxes.

  • Tax-Loss Harvesting 2026: How to Reduce Your Investment Tax Bill

    Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a commission if you apply through our links, at no extra cost to you.

    Tax-loss harvesting is a strategy that uses losing investments to reduce your tax bill. You sell an investment at a loss, use that loss to offset gains elsewhere, and buy a similar investment to keep your portfolio on track.

    Done right, it can save thousands of dollars in taxes every year — without changing your long-term investment strategy.

    Rates and figures as of May 2026.

    How Tax-Loss Harvesting Works

    Here is the basic sequence:

    1. You own an investment that has dropped in value.
    2. You sell it at a loss — this “realizes” the loss on paper.
    3. The loss offsets your capital gains for the year, reducing your taxable income.
    4. You immediately buy a similar (but not identical) investment to maintain your market exposure.

    An Example

    Say you have $10,000 in capital gains from selling appreciated stock. You also own a bond fund that is down $4,000. If you sell the bond fund, you have a $4,000 loss. That loss reduces your net capital gains to $6,000. At a 15% capital gains rate, you save $600 in taxes.

    The Wash-Sale Rule

    The IRS has a rule that blocks tax-loss harvesting if done sloppily. If you sell an investment at a loss and buy the “substantially identical” security within 30 days before or after the sale, the loss is disallowed.

    This is called the wash-sale rule. The 30-day window applies both before and after the sale — 61 days total.

    To avoid this: After selling a losing investment, buy a similar but not identical replacement. For example, sell a Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) and buy a Fidelity S&P 500 ETF (FZROX), or a total market fund. After 31 days, you can switch back if you want.

    Which Losses Can You Harvest?

    You can harvest losses on:

    • Stocks and ETFs in taxable brokerage accounts
    • Bond funds
    • Cryptocurrency (crypto is exempt from wash-sale rules as of 2026)
    • Mutual funds (with attention to timing)

    You cannot harvest losses in tax-advantaged accounts (401k, IRA). The accounts don’t generate taxable gains, so losses have no tax value inside them.

    Short-Term vs. Long-Term Loss Priority

    Short-term losses offset short-term gains first. Long-term losses offset long-term gains first. If you have excess losses of one type after offsetting gains, they can then offset gains of the other type.

    Short-term losses are more valuable because short-term gains are taxed at a higher rate.

    The $3,000 Annual Deduction

    If your total losses exceed your total gains, you can deduct up to $3,000 of the net loss against ordinary income each year. Remaining losses carry forward to future years indefinitely.

    Over time, a large carryforward balance becomes a tax asset you can use to offset future gains without paying any taxes.

    When to Harvest Losses

    • During market downturns — more positions are likely at a loss
    • At year-end — review all positions in October/November before December 31
    • After a large capital gain event (sale of property, business, or a large stock position)
    • Continuously — automated platforms like Betterment and Wealthfront do this daily

    Should You Use a Robo-Advisor for TLH?

    Yes, if you have significant taxable assets. Betterment and Wealthfront offer automated daily tax-loss harvesting on taxable accounts. They scan your portfolio for harvesting opportunities every day and execute the trades automatically.

    Manual harvesting is feasible with a focused portfolio (5–10 ETFs), but robo-advisors find more opportunities across a larger portfolio.

    The Bottom Line

    Tax-loss harvesting doesn’t change what you own in the long run — it just reduces how much tax you pay on gains. Do a year-end review every November, identify any positions at a meaningful loss, sell and replace them with similar assets, and watch your tax bill drop. The wash-sale rule is the main trap to avoid: wait 31 days before buying back the same security.

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