Tax-Loss Harvesting Cheat Sheet
The 4-Step Process
Step 1: Identify a Loss
Look for an investment (stock, ETF, mutual fund) in a taxable brokerage account that is currently worth less than you paid for it. This strategy does not apply to tax-advantaged accounts like 401(k)s or IRAs.
Step 2: Sell the Investment
Sell the asset to βrealizeβ the capital loss. The loss is the difference between your selling price and your cost basis (what you paid for it).
Step 3: Use the Loss to Offset Gains
When you file your taxes, the realized losses are first used to offset any realized capital gains from the same year.
- Short-term losses offset short-term gains first.
- Long-term losses offset long-term gains first.
- Any remaining losses can then offset gains of the other type.
If you have more losses than gains, you can use up to $3,000 of the excess loss to reduce your ordinary income (like your salary), which is taxed at a higher rate.
Step 4: Reinvest the Money (and Avoid a Wash Sale)
Immediately reinvest the cash from the sale into a different but similar investment. This keeps your money in the market, maintaining your desired asset allocation.
CRITICAL: You must not buy a βsubstantially identicalβ security 30 days before or after the sale. Doing so triggers the Wash Sale Rule, and the tax loss will be disallowed.
The Wash Sale Rule Explained
-
What is βSubstantially Identicalβ? The IRS does not give a perfect definition, but itβs generally interpreted as:
- The same stock (e.g., selling AAPL and buying AAPL).
- Options or contracts to buy the same stock.
- Mutual funds or ETFs that track the same index (e.g., selling one S&P 500 index fund and buying another).
-
How to Avoid It: Sell a security and buy one that is similar but not identical.
- Example: Sell an S&P 500 index fund and buy a Total Stock Market index fund.
- Example: Sell Coca-Cola (KO) and buy PepsiCo (PEP).
Example Scenario
- You invested $10,000 in ETF
A. - The market dips, and your investment is now worth $7,000.
- You also sold ETF
Bthis year for a $5,000 capital gain.
The Strategy in Action:
- You sell ETF
Ato realize a $3,000 capital loss. - This 5,000 gain from ETF
B. - Your net taxable capital gain is now only **5,000 - $3,000).
- You immediately reinvest the $7,000 from the sale of ETF
Ainto ETFC, which has a similar investment profile but is not substantially identical, keeping your market exposure.
Key Takeaways
- Only for Taxable Accounts: This strategy is irrelevant for IRAs, 401(k)s, etc.
- $3,000 Annual Income Deduction: This is a powerful benefit if your losses exceed your gains.
- Beware the Wash Sale Rule: This is the most common mistake. When in doubt, choose a replacement investment that is clearly different.
- Itβs about Tax Deferral: Tax-loss harvesting defers your tax liability. When you eventually sell the replacement investment, your cost basis will be lower, potentially leading to a larger taxable gain in the future. However, deferring taxes is almost always advantageous.