Capital Gains Treatment

Capital Gains Treatment

Capital gains treatments are specific taxes assessed on investment capital gains as determined by the tax code. In many instances, the stock must be held at least one year and a day in order to receive the preferred long-term capital gains treatment. There are times, however, such as if the stock is expected to decline deeply, where it can be more advantageous to investors to sell those shares and pay the higher capital gains tax rate rather than face even deeper losses. These days calculating the difference in your tax burden at different prices is quick and often automated, and if the stock price falls very far, you may not have to pay _gains_ at all because you're already selling at a loss! Short-term investments are taxed at ordinary income rates, while long-term investments receive a lower capital gains rate of 0%, 15% or 20%, depending on your income level. Stocks held less than one year are considered short-term capital gains and are taxed at ordinary income rates, which range from 10% to 37% depending on the investor's tax bracket. Stocks held longer than one year are considered as long-term for the treatment of any capital gains, and are taxed at rates of 0%, 15% or 20% depending on the investor's taxable income.

"Treatment" refers to the amount of time you must own a stock in order for it to be treated as either a short-term or a long-term investment.

What Is Capital Gains Treatment?

Capital gains treatments are specific taxes assessed on investment capital gains as determined by the tax code. When a stock is sold for a profit, the portion of the proceeds over and above the purchase value (or cost basis) is known as capital gains.

Capital gains tax is broken down into two categories: short-term and long-term. Stocks held longer than one year are considered as long-term for the treatment of any capital gains, and are taxed at rates of 0%, 15% or 20% depending on the investor's taxable income. Stocks held less than one year are considered short-term capital gains and are taxed at ordinary income rates, which range from 10% to 37% depending on the investor's tax bracket.

"Treatment" refers to the amount of time you must own a stock in order for it to be treated as either a short-term or a long-term investment.
Investments held for less than one year are considered short-term, while investments held for longer than one year are considered long-term.
Short-term investments are taxed at ordinary income rates, while long-term investments receive a lower capital gains rate of 0%, 15% or 20%, depending on your income level.

Understanding Capital Gains Treatment

The significant difference between the short-term and long-term rates makes it clear that paying close attention to the tax consequences of investing in stocks is a critical skill to develop.

As an investor's portfolio grows, the investor must keep a close eye on capital gains, including making adjustments near the end of the calendar year to reduce capital gains taxes as much as possible. The strategy of selling unprofitable stocks at a loss to offset gains in other sales is called tax-loss harvesting, and an accountant or investment professional can assist you in these efforts.

In recent years, discount brokers like Charles Schwab have added features to their desktop and mobile apps that show you where your gains and losses are. This helps do-it-yourselfers to harvest their tax losses without having to pay a professional to manage your portfolio. Robo-advisors such as Betterment also offer tax-loss-harvesting as a basic feature of your portfolio, though you don't have as much control over where they are investing your money.

How the Holding Period Affects Capital Gains Treatment

The holding period for a stock_ — or the time frame during which the stock is owned — _typically begins from the day the stock is held by the investor, regardless of how long any warrants or options await to be exercised.

In many instances, the stock must be held at least one year and a day in order to receive the preferred long-term capital gains treatment. There are times, however, such as if the stock is expected to decline deeply, where it can be more advantageous to investors to sell those shares and pay the higher capital gains tax rate rather than face even deeper losses.

These days calculating the difference in your tax burden at different prices is quick and often automated, and if the stock price falls very far, you may not have to pay gains at all because you're already selling at a loss!

Real World Examples of Capital Gains Treatment

There are cases where the holding period to receive long-term rates follow different rules. For example, if an individual were to inherit stock or other asset, they would automatically receive the preferred long-term rate.

If an employee is granted an incentive stock option, they must wait at least two years from the date the options were issued and at least one year from when the option was exercised and the stock came into the employee's possession.

When stock is gifted to another person, the time the shares spent in the possession of the person granting the stock would be included in the overall holding period.

Related terms:

Calendar Year

A calendar year is a one-year period that begins on January 1 and ends on December 31, based on the commonly-used Gregorian calendar. read more

Capital Gains Tax

A capital gains tax is a levy on the profit that an investor gains from the sale of an investment such as stock shares. Here's how to calculate it. read more

Capital Gain

Capital gain refers to an increase in a capital asset's value and is considered to be realized when the asset is sold. read more

Capital Gains Distribution

A capital gains distribution is a payment by a mutual fund or an exchange-traded fund of a portion of the proceeds from the fund's sales of stocks and other assets. read more

Portfolio

A portfolio is a collection of financial investments like stocks, bonds, commodities, cash, and cash equivalents, including mutual funds and ETFs. read more

Qualified Dividend

A qualified dividend is a type of dividend subject to capital gains tax rates that are lower than the income tax rates applied to ordinary dividends. read more

Realized Gain

A realized gain is a profit resulting from selling an asset at a price higher than the original purchase price.  read more

Robo-Advisor Tax-Loss Harvesting

Robo-advisor tax-loss harvesting is the automated selling of securities in a portfolio to deliberately incur losses to offset any capital gains or taxable income. read more

Robo-Advisor

Robo-advisors are digital platforms that provide automated, algorithm-driven financial planning services with little to no human supervision. read more

Taxes

A mandatory contribution levied on corporations or individuals by a level of government to finance government activities and public services  read more