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tax loss harvesting

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Tax-Loss Harvesting Guide — Offset Capital Gains and Cut Your Tax Bill

Tax-loss harvesting is one of the most effective legal strategies available to investors for reducing their tax liability. The concept is simple: sell investments that have declined in value to realize losses, then use those losses to offset capital gains and up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year. Any unused losses carry forward indefinitely until fully utilized. The strategy has become increasingly accessible as major brokerages — including Schwab, Fidelity, and Vanguard — have automated harvesting features in their platforms, and commission-free trading has eliminated the transaction cost barrier. With the 10-year Treasury yield hovering around 4.02% and the Federal Reserve's rate cuts reshaping fixed-income returns, many investors are sitting on a mix of gains and losses across their portfolios that creates prime harvesting opportunities. But tax-loss harvesting is not as simple as selling losers and calling it a day. The IRS wash-sale rule, the distinction between short-term and long-term losses, and the interaction with your overall [capital gains tax](/article/capital-gains-tax-explained-short-term-vs-long-term-rates-and-how-to-minimize-your-tax-bill) bracket all determine whether harvesting actually saves you money. This guide covers the mechanics, the rules, and the practical strategies that make harvesting worthwhile.

tax-loss harvestingtax lossharvesting

Capital Gains Tax Explained — Short-Term vs Long-Term Rates and How to Minimize Your Tax Bill

Every time you sell a stock, mutual fund, or piece of real estate for more than you paid, the IRS wants its share. Capital gains tax is one of the most consequential — and most misunderstood — levies facing American investors, and in 2026, the difference between short-term and long-term rates can mean paying anywhere from 0% to 37% on the same profit depending on how long you held the asset. With the S&P 500 trading near $686 and up roughly 42% from its 52-week low, millions of investors are sitting on unrealized gains heading into tax season. The Federal Reserve's rate-cutting cycle — the fed funds rate has fallen from 4.33% in August 2025 to 3.64% in January 2026 — has fueled equity appreciation, but it also means more Americans face capital gains decisions in their 2025 tax returns. Understanding how these rates work, when they apply, and how to legally minimize them is no longer optional for anyone with a brokerage account. This guide breaks down the 2026 capital gains tax structure, explains the critical distinction between short-term and long-term rates, and walks through proven strategies — from tax-loss harvesting to holding period optimization — that can meaningfully reduce what you owe.

capital gains taxcapital gainslong-term capital gains