Tax Loss Harvesting

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A tax strategy of selling securities at a loss to offset capital gains and reduce tax liability. Realized losses can offset capital gains dollar-for-dollar, with up to $3,000 of excess losses deductible against ordinary income annually. Subject to the wash sale rule, which prohibits repurchasing substantially identical securities within 30 days before or after the sale.

Example

An investor holds Stock A with a $10,000 unrealized loss and Stock B with a $15,000 unrealized gain. By selling Stock A before year-end, the investor can offset the $10,000 loss against the $15,000 gain, reducing taxable capital gains to $5,000. The investor must wait 31 days before repurchasing Stock A to avoid a wash sale violation.

Common Confusion

Students often forget the wash sale window is 30 days BEFORE and 30 days AFTER the sale (61-day total window), not just 30 days after. They also confuse thinking all losses can offset ordinary income equally when only $3,000 of excess losses per year can offset ordinary income, and losses must first offset capital gains.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying wash sale violations when securities are repurchased within the 30-day window before or after the sale
  • Calculating net capital gains or losses after applying tax loss harvesting to a portfolio
  • Understanding the $3,000 annual limit for deducting excess capital losses against ordinary income
  • Determining whether a replacement security is "substantially identical" for wash sale purposes
  • Understanding how harvested losses can be carried forward to future tax years

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Wash sale window (before sale) 30 days before Cannot repurchase substantially identical security 30 days before the sale date
Wash sale window (after sale) 30 days after Cannot repurchase substantially identical security 30 days after the sale date
Total wash sale window 61-day period 30 days before + day of sale + 30 days after
Ordinary income deduction limit $3,000 annually Maximum excess capital loss deductible against ordinary income per year ($1,500 if married filing separately)
Capital loss carryforward Unlimited years Excess losses beyond $3,000 annual limit can be carried forward indefinitely to future tax years

Example Exam Questions

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

Question 1

Marcus, a tax-conscious investor, has realized capital gains of $25,000 this year from selling Stock A. He also holds Stock B, currently showing an unrealized loss of $18,000. On December 15, Marcus sells Stock B to harvest the loss. On January 10 of the following year, Marcus repurchases Stock B because he believes it will recover. What is the tax consequence of this transaction?

Question 2

Under IRS regulations, what is the maximum amount of excess capital losses (after offsetting all capital gains) that an individual taxpayer can deduct against ordinary income in a single tax year?

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Question 3

An investor has the following transactions in the current tax year: $40,000 in realized short-term capital gains, $15,000 in realized long-term capital gains, $22,000 in realized short-term capital losses (from tax loss harvesting), and $8,000 in realized long-term capital losses (from tax loss harvesting). What is the investor's net capital gain or loss for the year, and how much (if any) can be deducted against ordinary income?

Question 4

All of the following statements about tax loss harvesting are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A client realizes a $50,000 capital gain from selling Stock A and wants to harvest losses before year-end to reduce tax liability. The client is considering selling securities currently showing unrealized losses. Which of the following considerations are accurate regarding the tax loss harvesting strategy?

1. The client should harvest at least $50,000 in losses to completely eliminate the capital gains tax liability
2. If the client harvests $60,000 in losses, the excess $10,000 can be deducted entirely against ordinary income this year
3. The client must wait 31 days after selling a security before repurchasing it to avoid a wash sale violation
4. If a wash sale occurs, the disallowed loss is permanently lost and cannot be recovered

💡 Memory Aid

Think of tax loss harvesting as "Selling Lemons to Sweeten the Tax Bill": You sell your losing positions (lemons) to offset winning positions, making your tax bill less bitter. But remember the "61-Day No-Buyback Zone": 30 days before + sale day + 30 days after. If you rebuy too soon, it's a wash sale and the lemon is spoiled (loss disallowed). The IRS gives you $3,000 of sympathy annually to offset ordinary income for excess losses.

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