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Tax-Loss Harvesting Explained: A Complete Guide for Investors and Tax Professionals

Meta Title: Tax-Loss Harvesting Explained: How to Reduce Capital Gains Taxes
Meta Description: Learn how tax-loss harvesting works, when to use it, IRS wash sale rules, and strategies investors and tax professionals should know to legally reduce taxes.

Tax-Loss Harvesting Explained

Most investors focus on making money in the stock market.

Smart investors also know how to minimize taxes.

One of the most effective tax strategies available is tax-loss harvesting—a technique that allows investors to use investment losses to reduce taxable gains and, in some cases, even lower ordinary income.

For tax professionals, understanding tax-loss harvesting can provide significant value to clients with brokerage accounts, mutual funds, ETFs, or other taxable investments.

This guide explains how tax-loss harvesting works, who benefits, IRS rules to know, and common mistakes to avoid.


What Is Tax-Loss Harvesting?

Tax-loss harvesting is the practice of selling investments that have declined in value to realize a capital loss.

That loss can then be used to:

  • Offset capital gains
  • Reduce taxable investment income
  • Deduct up to $3,000 of excess capital losses against ordinary income each year ($1,500 if married filing separately)
  • Carry unused losses forward indefinitely to future tax years

The goal isn’t simply to sell losing investments.

The goal is to reduce taxes while maintaining an investment strategy.


How Tax-Loss Harvesting Works

Imagine an investor owns two stocks.

Stock A

  • Purchased for $20,000
  • Sold for $35,000
  • Capital gain = $15,000

Stock B

  • Purchased for $15,000
  • Current value = $8,000
  • Capital loss = $7,000

If the investor sells both investments during the same tax year:

Capital gain:

$15,000

Capital loss:

($7,000)

Net taxable gain:

$8,000

Instead of paying taxes on a $15,000 gain, taxes are paid on only $8,000.


Why Investors Use Tax-Loss Harvesting

Tax-loss harvesting can provide several benefits.

Reduce Capital Gains Taxes

The primary benefit is reducing taxes owed on profitable investments.


Improve After-Tax Returns

Lower taxes mean investors keep more of their investment gains over time.

Even small annual savings can compound significantly over decades.


Offset Future Gains

If losses exceed gains this year, unused losses can carry forward to offset gains in future years.


Reduce Ordinary Income

If losses remain after offsetting all capital gains, taxpayers may deduct up to:

  • $3,000 annually
  • Remaining losses carry forward indefinitely

Short-Term vs. Long-Term Capital Gains

Tax-loss harvesting becomes even more valuable because different gains are taxed differently.

Short-Term Gains

Assets held one year or less

Taxed at ordinary income tax rates.

These are often taxed much higher than long-term gains.


Long-Term Gains

Assets held more than one year

Typically taxed at:

  • 0%
  • 15%
  • 20%

depending on taxable income.

Many investors strategically harvest losses to offset higher-taxed short-term gains first.


Understanding the IRS Wash Sale Rule

One of the most important rules in tax-loss harvesting is the wash sale rule.

A taxpayer cannot claim a deductible loss if they:

  • Sell a security at a loss
  • Purchase the same or a substantially identical security
  • Within 30 days before or after the sale

This creates a 61-day window:

  • 30 days before
  • Sale date
  • 30 days after

If the rule applies:

  • The tax loss is disallowed for the current sale.
  • Instead, the disallowed loss is added to the basis of the replacement shares.

Example

An investor sells:

100 shares of XYZ ETF

Loss:

$5,000

Ten days later, they repurchase the same ETF.

Result:

The $5,000 loss cannot be deducted because the transaction is considered a wash sale.


What Counts as “Substantially Identical”?

The IRS has not provided an exhaustive definition.

Generally:

Likely considered substantially identical:

  • The exact same stock
  • The same ETF
  • The same mutual fund

Usually not substantially identical:

  • Similar ETFs tracking different indexes
  • Different companies within the same industry
  • Different mutual funds with different investment objectives

Because the rules can be nuanced, investors should seek professional guidance before replacing investments.


Tax-Loss Harvesting Example

Suppose a taxpayer has:

InvestmentGain/Loss
Apple Stock+$18,000
Tesla Stock-$10,000
ETF-$4,000

Net result:

$18,000

Minus

$14,000 losses

Equals

$4,000 taxable capital gain

Without harvesting losses, taxes would have been owed on the entire $18,000 gain.


Carrying Losses Forward

Suppose an investor has:

Capital gains:

$5,000

Capital losses:

$25,000

Net capital loss:

$20,000

The taxpayer may:

  • Offset all $5,000 of gains
  • Deduct $3,000 against ordinary income
  • Carry forward the remaining $12,000 into future years

Those future losses can continue reducing taxable gains until fully used.


When Tax-Loss Harvesting Makes Sense

Tax-loss harvesting may benefit investors who:

  • Own taxable brokerage accounts
  • Have appreciated investments
  • Expect future capital gains
  • Are in higher tax brackets
  • Have concentrated stock positions
  • Regularly rebalance investment portfolios

It is generally less beneficial in tax-advantaged retirement accounts such as traditional IRAs or Roth IRAs because gains and losses inside those accounts are not currently taxable.


Common Tax-Loss Harvesting Mistakes

Ignoring the Wash Sale Rule

Repurchasing the same investment too soon eliminates the immediate tax benefit.


Letting Taxes Drive Investment Decisions

Taxes should be one consideration—not the only one. Selling quality investments solely for tax reasons may not align with a sound long-term strategy.


Forgetting State Taxes

Many states follow federal capital gain rules, but state tax treatment can differ.


Overlooking Mutual Fund Distributions

Mutual funds may distribute taxable capital gains even if the investment declined during the year.


Poor Recordkeeping

Investors should maintain accurate records of:

  • Purchase dates
  • Cost basis
  • Sale dates
  • Carryforward losses
  • Replacement investments

Good documentation simplifies tax preparation and helps avoid reporting errors.


How Tax Professionals Can Help

Tax-loss harvesting often involves coordination between investment management and tax planning.

Tax professionals can help clients:

  • Estimate year-end capital gains
  • Identify opportunities to harvest losses
  • Avoid wash sale violations
  • Track capital loss carryforwards
  • Coordinate with financial advisors before year-end
  • Evaluate the tax impact of portfolio rebalancing

For clients with substantial investment portfolios, proactive tax planning can produce meaningful long-term tax savings.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can tax-loss harvesting eliminate all capital gains taxes?

It can offset some or all capital gains, depending on the amount of realized losses available. If losses exceed gains, up to $3,000 of the remaining loss can generally offset ordinary income each year, with additional losses carried forward.

Does tax-loss harvesting apply to retirement accounts?

No. Traditional IRAs, Roth IRAs, and most employer-sponsored retirement plans do not recognize capital gains or losses for current tax purposes.

Can unused losses expire?

Generally, no. Unused capital losses can typically be carried forward indefinitely until they are fully used, subject to applicable tax rules.

Is tax-loss harvesting legal?

Yes. Tax-loss harvesting is a long-established tax planning strategy recognized under U.S. tax law, provided taxpayers comply with IRS requirements, including the wash sale rule.


Final Thoughts

Tax-loss harvesting is one of the most valuable tax planning strategies available to investors with taxable brokerage accounts. By realizing investment losses strategically, taxpayers can offset capital gains, reduce current tax liability, and carry unused losses into future years.

For tax professionals, understanding the mechanics of tax-loss harvesting—including capital gain netting, carryforward rules, and the wash sale rule—can help clients preserve more of their investment returns and avoid costly mistakes. When combined with thoughtful portfolio management and year-end tax planning, tax-loss harvesting can improve after-tax wealth without changing an investor’s long-term financial goals.

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, or investment advice. Tax-loss harvesting strategies should be evaluated based on each taxpayer’s individual circumstances, and investors should consult a qualified tax professional or financial advisor before implementing them.

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