Tax Drag

Tax Drag

Tax drag is the reduction of potential income due to taxes. Individuals can minimize the impact of tax drag by making use of tax-sheltered investment options such as 401(k)s, IRAs, and 529 savings plans, among others. Therefore, returns would be 1.875% for Security A and 2.125% for Security B, equating to a tax drag of 25 basis points or the difference in returns between the two securities. Tax drag is often cited as a key difference between a type of investment that is tax-sheltered and one that is not, in which capital gains and other taxes must be paid. Tax drag can have a significant effect on overall investment performance for many individuals, and tax-efficient investing techniques are important for recognizing capital gains, transferring wealth, and estate planning.

Tax drag is a reference to the loss in returns on investments as a result of the taxes that you must pay.

What Is Tax Drag?

Tax drag is the reduction of potential income due to taxes. The concept describes the loss in returns, usually on an investment, as a result of taxation. Tax drag is commonly used when describing the difference between an investment vehicle that is tax-sheltered and one that is not.

Tax drag is a reference to the loss in returns on investments as a result of the taxes that you must pay.
Tax drag is often cited as a key difference between a type of investment that is tax-sheltered and one that is not, in which capital gains and other taxes must be paid.
Tax drag is not specific to any one income class or type of investment vehicle and is therefore of concern to a variety of market participants.
Individuals can minimize the impact of tax drag by making use of tax-sheltered investment options such as 401(k)s, IRAs, and 529 savings plans, among others.

Understanding Tax Drag

Tax drag has the potential to reduce investment returns, so it is worth paying attention to regardless of income level. Tax drag can have a significant effect on overall investment performance for many individuals, and tax-efficient investing techniques are important for recognizing capital gains, transferring wealth, and estate planning.

Tax Drag Example

For example, suppose that an individual can invest $1 million in two securities in either Country A with a 25% withholding tax, or Country B with a 15% withholding tax. Both securities pay a 2.5% dividend. Security A would return $25,000 minus $6,250 in taxes, for a total of $18,750. Investment B would return $25,000 minus $3,750 in taxes, for a total of $21,250. Therefore, returns would be 1.875% for Security A and 2.125% for Security B, equating to a tax drag of 25 basis points or the difference in returns between the two securities.

Why Tax Drag Matters

Tax drag is important to consider for a variety of reasons. Investors and stock promoters often tout their returns, but rarely include the tax consequences of those returns. This is mostly because every investor's tax circumstances vary.

Many investors also reinvest their returns, so when taxes eat into those returns year after year, it leaves less money left over to reinvest and less to grow and compound over time. This can make a big difference in the size of a person’s portfolio over a long period of time. As a result, avoiding tax drag is what makes tax-free investments, such as municipal bonds, so compelling for many investors.

How To Limit Tax Drag

To minimize tax drag, individuals can take advantage of any and all of the tax-sheltered investment vehicles they have access to. For most households, that means company retirement plans like 401(k)s as well as individual retirement accounts (IRAs).

Families saving for college can take advantage of 529 savings plans, and people enrolled in high-deductible health care plans should consider using health savings accounts (HSAs). Investors can also reduce the drag of taxes on their portfolios by choosing funds with dividends that are mostly or all qualified and placing international funds in a taxable account.

Related terms:

529 Plan

A 529 plan is a tax-advantaged account that can be used to pay for qualified education costs, including college, K-12, and apprenticeship programs. read more

Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)

Adjusted gross income (AGI) equals your gross income minus certain adjustments. The IRS uses the AGI to determine how much income tax you owe. read more

Compound

Compound refers to the ability of a sum of money to grow exponentially over time by the repeated addition of earnings to the principal invested. read more

Distribution

Distributions are payments that derive from a designated account, such as income generated from a pension, retirement account, or trust fund. read more

Dividend

A dividend is the distribution of some of a company's earnings to a class of its shareholders, as determined by the company's board of directors. read more

Form 1099-R: Distributions From Pensions, Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans

Form 1099-R is an IRS tax form used to report distributions from annuities, profit-sharing plans, retirement plans, or insurance contracts. read more

Income

Income is money received in return for working, providing a product or service, or investing capital. A pension or a gift is also income. read more

Investment Vehicle Defined

Investment vehicles are securities or financial asset, such as equities or fixed income instruments, that an individual uses to gain positive returns. 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

Promoter

A promoter is an individual or company that for a fee raises money for investments. Learn how stock promoters work and what you need to look out for.  read more