Capital Gains Tax

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Tax on profit from selling capital assets, determined by holding period. Short-term capital gains (held 12 months or less) are taxed at ordinary income rates up to 37%, while long-term capital gains (held more than 12 months) receive preferential tax treatment at 0%, 15%, or 20% rates. Cost basis determines the gain amount, making holding period critical for tax planning.

Example

An investor purchases 100 shares of stock at $50 ($5,000 cost basis) and sells at $70 after 18 months. The $2,000 capital gain ($7,000 - $5,000) is taxed at long-term rates (maximum 20%) because the holding period exceeded 12 months. If sold at 10 months, the same $2,000 gain would be taxed at ordinary income rates (up to 37%), potentially doubling the tax owed.

Common Confusion

Students often believe exactly 12 months qualifies for long-term treatment, but long-term requires MORE than 12 months. A position held exactly 365 days is still short-term. Additionally, many confuse unrealized (paper) gains with realized gains: only realized gains from actual sales trigger tax liability. Finally, municipal bond capital gains are fully taxable despite tax-exempt interest.

How This Is Tested

  • Calculating capital gains by subtracting cost basis from sale proceeds
  • Determining short-term vs. long-term classification based on holding period (exactly 12 months = short-term)
  • Understanding cost basis adjustments from stock splits, stock dividends, and reinvested dividends
  • Recognizing that municipal bond capital gains are taxable despite tax-exempt interest income
  • Applying the wash sale rule to disallow losses when repurchasing within 61-day window
  • Understanding $3,000 annual limit on capital losses offsetting ordinary income

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Long-term holding period threshold More than 12 months Exactly 12 months or less = short-term
Long-term capital gains tax rates 0%, 15%, or 20% Depends on income bracket; significantly lower than ordinary rates
Short-term capital gains tax rate Ordinary income rates (up to 37%) Taxed same as wages and salary
Capital loss deduction limit (ordinary income) $3,000 per year Excess losses carry forward indefinitely with character preserved
Wash sale rule window 61 days total 30 days before sale + sale day + 30 days after sale

Example Exam Questions

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

Question 1

Marcus, a high-income tax attorney in the 37% tax bracket, is reviewing his portfolio with his investment adviser. He purchased shares of a technology stock 11 months ago for $100,000, and the position is now worth $135,000. Marcus needs $135,000 for a down payment on investment property closing in 6 weeks. His adviser suggests waiting an additional month before selling the stock. What is the primary tax benefit of this recommendation?

Question 2

What is the holding period requirement for a capital gain to receive preferential long-term tax treatment?

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Question 3

An investor purchased 200 shares of XYZ Corporation stock at $45 per share on March 15, 2024. On March 15, 2025 (exactly 12 months later), the investor sold all shares at $62 per share. The investor is in the 32% ordinary income tax bracket and the 15% long-term capital gains bracket. What is the total capital gains tax owed on this transaction?

Question 4

All of the following statements about capital gains tax are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A client purchased shares of a mutual fund for $10,000 and sold them 8 months later for $12,500, generating a $2,500 gain. The client is in the 24% ordinary income tax bracket and the 15% long-term capital gains bracket. Which of the following statements are accurate?

1. The $2,500 gain will be taxed at 24% because it is short-term
2. If the client had held the shares for 12 months instead of 8, the gain would be taxed at 15%
3. The $2,500 represents a realized capital gain subject to current tax
4. Reinvesting the $12,500 proceeds into another mutual fund would defer the capital gains tax

💡 Memory Aid

Remember the "One Year Plus One Day" rule: Long-term capital gains need MORE than 12 months, not exactly 12. Think of it as crossing a finish line: you must go past the 12-month mark to get the preferential tax rates (0%/15%/20%). Short-term = ordinary rates (up to 37%). The holding period makes or breaks tax efficiency.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: