Key takeaways
Tax loss harvesting is when you sell securities for less than their cost basis to offset realized capital gains in other areas.
Tax loss harvesting can be used in many situations, including when rebalancing your portfolio and trying to stay in a lower tax bracket.
Tax loss harvesting is a complex strategy, so getting advice from a financial professional is important.
Buy low and sell high. It’s the universal strategy for investing. With major stock market indices down significantly in 2022 due to factors like high inflation, rising interest rates and supply chain constraints, a portion of your portfolio may be in the red. Tax loss harvesting is a strategy that may provide some relief from investment losses by potentially reducing your tax liability.
“Because of the increased volatility in the marketplace, investors who have realized gains may prefer to not remain in a particular position,” says Amit Poddar, senior vice president and market leader for U.S. Bank Private Wealth Management. “They may also want to increase their cash and liquidity position. Or, opportunistically, they may want to capture as much of the gains as they can in hopes of buying back into the market at an appropriate time. That's where tax loss harvesting comes into play.”
Tax loss harvesting is when you sell securities for less than their cost basis, or the price you originally paid for them. This captures losses to offset gains you may have realized in other investments.
Tax loss harvesting is when you sell securities for less than their cost basis, or the price you originally paid for them. This captures losses to offset gains you may have realized in other investments, including the sale of real estate, a business or another large asset.
How you match your losses to gains depends on how long you held the assets. Typically, short-term losses—those you held for 12 months or less—are used first to offset short-term gains, and long-term losses of assets held for more than a year are used to offset long-term gains. If you have losses beyond the matching approach, you’re then allowed to apply short-term losses to long-term gains and long-term losses to short-term gains.
If you sold an investment property you’d owned for less than 12 months and realized a profit, that profit would be subject to short-term capital gains tax. You could offset some of that tax liability by selling your Acme Corp. stock for less than what you paid for them. If you owned the Acme stock for less than a year prior to its sale, the realized short-term capital loss can be used first to offset the short-term capital gains realized on the sale of your investment property. Then, excess short-term capital losses can be used to offset other realized long-term capital gains. Any remaining unused capital losses can be carried forward and used subject to the “passive loss” rules.
“In an ideal scenario, you want to take your losses and offset your short-term capital gains, since they’re taxed at a higher rate,” says Poddar.
After you’ve offset gains, investors who file taxes jointly with a spouse are allowed to claim an additional $3,000 loss against ordinary income. Those who are single or married filing separately are limited to $1,500. Amounts over the limit can be carried forward to subsequent years but treated as passive losses subject to the same offset limits under the passive loss rules.
But there’s a caveat. If you take a loss, you must stay out of that stock for a month to avoid violating the “wash sale rule.” If you buy back into the position or previously purchased stock within 30 days of its sale, you can no longer claim that loss on your taxes. Instead, under the “wash sale rule,” the loss will be added to the newly acquired stock’s cost basis.
The potential for tax loss harvesting benefits will be specific to your financial situation. Here are some situations where tax loss harvesting might be useful. Given the need for proper coordination and compliance with complex tax rules for the desired result, it is imperative that qualified financial and tax professionals be consulted prior to implementation.
While tax loss harvesting can be done at any time, most investors choose to use this strategy near the end of the year, once they have a better idea of their portfolio performance and start planning to file their taxes. Poddar cautions investors to start the process sooner rather than later.
“We see a lot of investors who want to capture losses between Christmas and New Year,” he says, adding it pays to know when the last day to execute the sale of your positions for tax loss is. “Start thinking of harvesting in the fall and start executing a chosen plan much ahead of the late December deadline.”
Tax loss harvesting can be beneficial. It’s also nuanced and complex. Before selling assets, talk with a financial or tax professional to determine if a tax loss harvesting strategy is right for you.
Learn about U.S. Bank’s approach to investment management.
Learn what new tax law changes included in the Inflation Reduction Act and SECURE Act 2.0 may mean for you.
Understanding your portfolio’s tax characteristics is a step toward more efficient investing.