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Tax-Free Capital Gains for Some

Taxpayers in the two lowest brackets will pay no tax on their 2010 capital gains.

By Mary Beth Franklin, Senior Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance

March 3, 2011
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The stock market’s rebound from its nadir in March 2009 means many investors are back in the money. And some them will owe no tax on the profits they cashed in last year when they file their 2010 tax return this spring.

Normally, capital gains and qualified dividends are taxed at a maximum rate of 15% -- a bargain compared with the top income tax rate of 35%. But for 2010 (and through 2012), investors in the two lowest income tax brackets will pay no tax on their capital gains and dividends.

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Timing matters

To qualify for preferential capital-gains treatment, you must hold shares of your stocks or mutual funds for more than a year before selling. (This applies to assets in taxable accounts, but not those in retirement accounts. Profits inside a tax shelter are not taxed when the gains are realized, but are taxed at your ordinary rates upon withdrawal.) Short-term capital gains on assets held less than a year are taxed at a maximum 35%.

To figure your tax liability on your investments, you must first match any short-term gains with short-term losses and long-term gains with long-term losses. If, after netting capital gains and losses, you are left with a capital gain, it is taxed at a maximum 15% -- or, depending on your tax bracket, 0%.

But if you are left with a loss, you can use it to offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income, such as wages, and carry forward excess losses to future years. The key is that the loss must be real, not just a paper loss, in a taxable account. Losses in a retirement account, such as an IRA or 401(k), generally can’t be used to reduce ordinary income.

Tax-free gains

To take advantage of the 0% capital-gains rate for 2010, your taxable income can’t exceed $34,000 if you are single; $45,500 if you are a single head of household with dependents; or $68,000 if you are married filing jointly. Note that this is taxable income. That’s what’s left after you subtract personal exemptions -- worth $3,650 each in 2010 for you, your spouse and your dependents -- and your itemized deductions or standard deduction from your adjusted gross income.

The standard deduction for 2010 is $5,700 for individuals; $8,400 for heads of households; and $11,400 for married couples. Plus, there’s an added standard deduction of $1,100 per person for married individuals 65 or older and $1,400 for single filers 65 or older.

Any gains that lift your income above that threshold would be taxed at the maximum 15% capital-gains rate.

Likely candidates to benefit from the 0% tax rate include retirees, who have a higher standard deduction than younger taxpayers and who are not taxed on some of their Social Security benefits, and the unemployed, who may have had to tap their investments to make ends meet.

One group of taxpayers who won’t benefit from the zero capital-gains rate are children affected by the “kiddie tax.” Dependent children under 19 and full-time students under 24 are affected by the special rule that applies their parent’s higher tax rate to investment income they received in 2010 in excess of $1,900.

Advice for fund investors

If, like most investors, your mutual fund dividends are automatically used to buy extra shares, remember that each reinvestment increases your tax basis in the fund. That, in turn, reduces the taxable capital gain (or increases the tax-saving loss) when you redeem shares. Forgetting to include the reinvested dividends in your basis results in double taxation of the dividends -- once when you receive them and later when they’re included in the proceeds of the sale. Don’t make that costly mistake. If you’re not sure what your basis is, ask the fund for help.


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Reader Comments (5)

Posted by: Pat at 12/04/2009 04:27:50 PM

Great article, but it makes me wonder, what about this situation: You realized a large capital loss (say $20,000) on your 2008 return. You can only claim $3,000 in your 2008 return, so you have $17,000 in carry-over losses into 2009. In 2009 you realize a large capital gain, say $15,000. Does the $15,000 gain offset against the $17,000 carryover, resulting in a $2,000 carryover loss in 2009 and no further carry over in the years ahead?

Posted by: RAYMOND DICOLA at 12/04/2009 04:38:56 PM

MARY BETH, I HAVE A QUESTION ABOUT THE ARTICLE IN THE JAN. PUBLICATION DEALING WITH ROTH CONVERSIONS. I AM 64 AND DISABLED AND IN THE 20% BRACKET. IF I CONVERT SAY $60,000 IN EARLY 2010 THE TAXES DUE WOULD BE $12,000. CAN I PAY TAXES ON A PORTION, $4,000 ON APRIL 2011 FOR THE TAX YEAR 2010 AND SPLIT THE REMAINING $8,000 OVER TAX DUE APRIL 2012 AND 2013?

Posted by: Jeff at 12/04/2009 06:53:39 PM

Pat, $3000 is the limit on the capital loss you can enter on your 1040, but there is NO limit per se on how much of your capital loss carryover you can use to offset current-year capital gains. In your example, the $15,000 current-year gain would be completely offset by the $17,000 loss carryover with $2,000 to spare. That $2,000 loss could then be entered on your current-year 1040 because it does not exceed the $3,000 limit. If your capital loss carryover had been $19,000 instead, you would enter a $3,000 loss on the current-year's 1040, and still have a $1,000 loss carryover for future year(s). Disclaimer: I am not a tax professional.

Posted by: Hubert Bordeaux at 01/27/2010 09:01:57 PM

I am in the lower tax bracket. If I sell a long time owned lot for $ 500,000.00 capital gain, will it have 0% capital gain tax.

Posted by: Jessie at 03/31/2010 07:27:30 AM

I saw on the news on Monday that you can offset some capital gains taxes by giving up to $950 to each of your children. I asked my accountant about this and he did not know about this. Do you?



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