Long-Term Capital Gains

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Profits from selling capital assets held more than 12 months, taxed at preferential rates of 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on income level. Significantly lower than ordinary income tax rates (up to 37%) to encourage long-term investing. Qualified dividends also receive the same preferential long-term capital gains tax treatment.

Example

An investor purchases stock for $50,000 and sells it 15 months later for $68,000, generating an $18,000 long-term capital gain. At the 15% long-term rate, the tax is $2,700. If the same stock had been sold at 11 months (short-term), the investor in the 32% ordinary income bracket would owe $5,760 in tax ($18,000 × 32%), more than double the long-term rate. This $3,060 tax savings incentivizes patient, long-term investing.

Common Confusion

Students often believe exactly 12 months qualifies for long-term treatment, but long-term requires MORE than 12 months (12 months plus one day minimum). A position held exactly 365 days is still short-term. Additionally, many assume the 0%/15%/20% rates apply to different portions of gains (like tax brackets), but these are marginal rates based on total taxable income: all long-term gains are taxed at whichever single rate applies to your income level. Finally, regular REIT dividends are taxed at ordinary income rates (not qualified dividend rates), even if you hold the REIT long-term. However, REIT capital gains distributions are a separate category: they receive long-term capital gains treatment only if the REIT held the underlying asset long-term, regardless of how long you held the REIT shares.

How This Is Tested

  • Determining if a capital gain qualifies as long-term based on holding period (more than 12 months required)
  • Calculating tax savings by comparing long-term rates (0%/15%/20%) to ordinary income rates (up to 37%)
  • Identifying which income receives long-term capital gains treatment (qualified dividends, long-term asset sales)
  • Understanding that 0%/15%/20% rates depend on total taxable income, not the amount of gain
  • Recognizing that municipal bond capital gains are taxable at long-term or short-term rates despite tax-exempt interest

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Long-term holding period requirement More than 12 months Exactly 12 months or less = short-term; must cross the 12-month threshold
Long-term capital gains tax rates 0%, 15%, or 20% Rate depends on total taxable income; applies to entire gain at one rate
Short-term capital gains tax rate (comparison) Ordinary income rates (10%-37%) Same rates as wages, salary, and interest income
Qualified dividend tax treatment Same as long-term capital gains (0%/15%/20%) Dividends meeting holding period and corporate requirements

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Rebecca, age 58 and in the 32% ordinary income tax bracket, purchased 500 shares of a dividend-paying utility stock for $40,000 on January 10, 2024. The position is now worth $52,000 on January 5, 2025, and Rebecca needs funds for a home renovation. Her investment adviser recommends waiting until January 11, 2025 before selling. What is the primary benefit of this recommendation?

Question 2

What are the three possible federal tax rates for long-term capital gains?

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Question 3

An investor purchased shares of a growth stock for $25,000 on March 20, 2024. The investor sells the shares for $32,000 on March 20, 2025 (exactly 12 months later). The investor is in the 24% ordinary income tax bracket and would qualify for the 15% long-term capital gains rate. What is the federal capital gains tax owed on this transaction?

Question 4

All of the following statements about long-term capital gains are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A client sold shares of a real estate investment trust (REIT) that she had owned for 14 months, generating a $10,000 gain. The client is in the 32% ordinary income tax bracket and qualifies for the 15% long-term capital gains rate. During the holding period, the REIT distributed $2,000 in qualified dividends and $1,500 in capital gains distributions. Which of the following statements are accurate?

1. The $10,000 gain from selling the REIT shares qualifies for long-term capital gains treatment at 15%
2. The $2,000 in qualified dividends are taxed at the preferential 15% long-term capital gains rate
3. The $1,500 in capital gains distributions are tax-exempt because REITs pass through tax advantages
4. The total tax owed is $1,500 on the $10,000 gain

💡 Memory Aid

Think "Long-Term = Long Runway": To qualify for the preferential rates (0%/15%/20%), you need more than 12 months, like a plane needing a long runway to take off. Exactly 12 months is still on the ground (short-term, taxed at ordinary rates up to 37%). The holding period is your runway: cross the 12-month line to unlock the tax savings of long-term treatment.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: