Short-Term Capital Gains
Short-Term Capital Gains
Profits from selling capital assets held for one year or less, taxed at ordinary income rates (10%-37% depending on tax bracket). Unlike long-term capital gains, short-term gains receive no preferential tax treatment. This higher tax burden significantly impacts after-tax returns and discourages frequent trading.
An investor purchases 100 shares of stock on March 1, 2026 for $5,000 and sells them on December 15, 2026 for $7,000. The $2,000 profit is a short-term capital gain because the holding period was only 9 months. If the investor is in the 24% tax bracket, they owe $480 in federal tax ($2,000 × 0.24), compared to $300 ($2,000 × 0.15) if they had held the shares for just over one year to qualify for long-term capital gains treatment.
Students often confuse the holding period threshold. Assets must be held for MORE than one year to qualify for long-term treatment. Exactly one year or less (365 days or fewer from purchase date) results in short-term treatment. Additionally, many incorrectly assume short-term gains receive some tax preference when they are taxed identically to ordinary income like wages and salary.
How This Is Tested
- Determining whether a gain is short-term or long-term based on holding period calculations
- Calculating tax liability on short-term capital gains using ordinary income tax rates
- Comparing after-tax returns between short-term and long-term capital gains scenarios
- Understanding that short-term capital gains offset short-term capital losses before netting against long-term
- Recognizing tax-planning strategies to convert short-term gains to long-term by extending holding periods
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Holding period for short-term classification | 1 year or less | Assets held for exactly 365 days or fewer from purchase date |
| Tax rate range (ordinary income) | 10%-37% | Same rates as wages, salary, and other ordinary income (2026 federal tax brackets) |
| Preferential rate | None | No special tax treatment unlike long-term capital gains (0%, 15%, 20%) |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
Marcus, a client in the 32% federal tax bracket, is considering selling two stock positions that have both appreciated significantly. Stock A was purchased 11 months ago and has a $15,000 unrealized gain. Stock B was purchased 14 months ago and has a $15,000 unrealized gain. Marcus needs $15,000 for a down payment and asks which position he should sell to minimize taxes. What is the most tax-efficient recommendation?
B is correct. Stock B qualifies for long-term capital gains treatment (held more than one year) and would be taxed at the preferential 15% rate for most taxpayers in the 32% bracket, resulting in $2,250 tax ($15,000 × 0.15). Stock A would generate a short-term capital gain taxed at Marcus's ordinary income rate of 32%, resulting in $4,800 tax ($15,000 × 0.32). Selling Stock B saves Marcus $2,550 in federal taxes.
A is incorrect because shorter holding periods result in higher tax rates for short-term gains, not lower. C is incorrect because splitting the sale would create both short-term and long-term gains, resulting in higher total tax than selling only the long-term position. D is incorrect because the holding period creates a significant tax difference: 32% ordinary income rate versus 15% long-term capital gains rate.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to provide tax-efficient advice by understanding the significant difference between short-term and long-term capital gains treatment. Advisers must recognize situations where delaying a sale by just weeks or months can save clients thousands in taxes.
At what tax rate are short-term capital gains taxed for federal income tax purposes?
C is correct. Short-term capital gains are taxed at the taxpayer's ordinary income tax rates, which range from 10% to 37% for federal income tax depending on the taxpayer's total taxable income and filing status. Short-term gains receive no preferential treatment and are taxed identically to wages, salary, interest, and other ordinary income.
A is incorrect because 0%, 15%, or 20% are the preferential long-term capital gains rates, not short-term rates. B is incorrect because 28% is the maximum rate for collectibles (coins, art, antiques), not the standard short-term capital gains treatment. D is incorrect because while the 3.8% net investment income tax (NIIT) may apply to high-income taxpayers on investment income including capital gains, the base tax rate for short-term gains is the ordinary income rate (not ordinary rate plus NIIT automatically).
The Series 65 exam frequently tests knowledge of capital gains taxation. Understanding that short-term gains receive no preferential treatment is essential for tax planning and helping clients understand why holding periods matter for after-tax returns.
Master Client Recommendations Concepts
CertFuel's spaced repetition system helps you retain key terms like Short-Term Capital Gains and 500+ other exam concepts. Start practicing for free.
Access Free BetaAn investor in the 24% federal tax bracket realizes a $10,000 capital gain. What is the difference in federal tax owed if the gain is classified as short-term rather than long-term (assuming the 15% long-term capital gains rate applies)?
B is correct. Calculate the tax difference:
Short-term capital gains tax (ordinary income rate):
$10,000 × 24% = $2,400
Long-term capital gains tax (preferential rate):
$10,000 × 15% = $1,500
Difference in tax owed:
$2,400 - $1,500 = $900
By holding the asset for more than one year to qualify for long-term treatment, the investor saves $900 in federal taxes on the $10,000 gain.
A ($400) results from using incorrect rates or calculation errors. C ($1,500) is the long-term capital gains tax amount, not the difference. D ($2,400) is the short-term capital gains tax amount, not the difference.
Tax calculation questions test your ability to quantify the financial impact of short-term versus long-term capital gains treatment. The Series 65 exam expects advisers to understand the dollar impact of tax-planning decisions to provide concrete recommendations to clients.
All of the following statements about short-term capital gains are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). Short-term capital gains do NOT receive a 50% exclusion. They are fully taxable at ordinary income rates with no special deductions or exclusions. The 50% exclusion may confuse students with qualified small business stock (QSBS) rules under Section 1202, which is a completely different and highly specialized provision.
A is accurate: short-term capital gains result from assets held for one year or less (365 days or fewer from purchase). B is accurate: short-term gains are taxed at ordinary income rates (10%-37% federal brackets). D is accurate: short-term gains receive no preferential treatment and do not qualify for the 0%, 15%, or 20% long-term capital gains rates.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to distinguish short-term capital gains from other tax treatments. Understanding that short-term gains receive no special deductions or exclusions is critical for accurate tax planning and avoiding costly client misinformation.
A taxpayer in the 32% federal tax bracket sells stock for a $20,000 profit after holding it for 10 months. Which of the following statements about this transaction are accurate?
1. The gain qualifies as a short-term capital gain
2. The federal tax owed on the gain will be $6,400
3. Holding the stock for 3 more months would reduce the tax by $3,400
4. The gain will be taxed at the same rate as the taxpayer's salary
D is correct. All four statements are accurate.
Statement 1 is TRUE: The stock was held for 10 months (less than one year), so the gain qualifies as a short-term capital gain.
Statement 2 is TRUE: Short-term capital gains are taxed at ordinary income rates. The taxpayer is in the 32% bracket, so the tax is $20,000 × 0.32 = $6,400.
Statement 3 is TRUE: If the taxpayer held for 3 more months (total of 13 months, which is more than one year), the gain would be long-term and taxed at 15% for most taxpayers in the 32% bracket. Long-term tax would be $20,000 × 0.15 = $3,000. The savings would be $6,400 - $3,000 = $3,400.
Statement 4 is TRUE: Short-term capital gains are taxed at ordinary income rates, which is the same rate applied to salary, wages, and other ordinary income. Both are taxed at the taxpayer's marginal rate (32% in this case).
The Series 65 exam tests comprehensive understanding of how short-term capital gains are calculated, taxed, and compared to long-term treatment. Recognizing that extending a holding period by even a few months can save substantial taxes demonstrates the practical value of tax-aware investment advice.
💡 Memory Aid
SHORT-term = SHORT on savings: Assets held for one year or LESS get hit with ordinary income taxes (no tax break!). Think "365 days or die": You need MORE than a year to escape the ordinary income tax trap and unlock the sweet long-term capital gains rates. One day short = full ordinary tax bite.
Related Concepts
This term is part of this cluster: