Tax-Loss Harvesting
Selling investments at a loss to offset capital gains or up to $3,000 of ordinary income each year.
What You Need to Know
Tax-loss harvesting is a core tax strategy for taxable investment accounts. You intentionally realize losses to reduce the taxes owed on current or future gains.
How It Works:
- Sell an investment trading below your purchase price
- Realize the capital loss on your tax return
- Immediately reinvest in a similar (not identical) asset to maintain market exposure
- Use losses to offset gains or $3,000 of ordinary income annually (excess carries forward indefinitely)
Watch the Wash-Sale Rule: You can't buy the same (or "substantially identical") investment 30 days before or after harvesting the loss, or the tax benefit is disallowed.
Example: Sell an S&P 500 ETF for a $5,000 loss, buy a Total Market ETF as a replacement, and use the loss to offset $5,000 of realized gains from rebalancing another position.
Sources & References
This information is sourced from authoritative government and academic institutions:
- irs.gov
https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc409
Related Calculators & Tools
Put your knowledge into action with these interactive tools:
Related Terms in Investment Analysis
Appreciation
The increase in an asset's value over time, whether it's real estate, stocks, or other investments.
Asset Class
A group of investments with similar behavior, risk, and regulatory profiles (e.g., stocks, bonds, cash).
Bond
A fixed-income investment where you loan money to a government or corporation in exchange for regular interest payments.
Bond Yield
The return an investor earns on a bond, expressed as a percentage, which can be calculated as current yield (annual interest Γ· current price) or yield to maturity (total return if held until maturity).
Capital Gains Tax
Tax on profits from selling investments like stocks, bonds, or real estate.
Capital Loss
A loss realized when you sell an investment for less than you paid for it, which can offset capital gains for tax purposes.