Educational information, not individual financial advice.
Key Takeaways
Tax-loss harvesting is the practice of selling investments that have lost value to realize the loss for tax purposes, while immediately repurchasing a similar (but not "substantially identical") investment to maintain market exposure. Done correctly, it generates tax savings with no change to your actual investment strategy.
Capital losses offset capital gains directly, dollar for dollar:
For a taxpayer in the 32% ordinary bracket and 15% long-term capital gains bracket:
Suppose you own $50,000 of Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI), purchased at $55,000 in a prior year. The market has dropped; your unrealized loss is $5,000.
The IRS prevents "fake" losses through the wash-sale rule: if you sell at a loss and buy a substantially identical security within 30 days before or after the sale, the loss is disallowed and added to the basis of the new shares.
The wash-sale window:
Solutions:
The IRS has never definitively defined "substantially identical." Current practice:
Conservative practice: choose funds tracking different indexes when harvesting.
Losses beyond the $3,000 ordinary-income limit carry forward indefinitely. A $30,000 loss harvested in 2025 with no gains to offset could cover $3,000 of ordinary income that year, then $3,000/year for each of the next 9 years — or be deployed all at once against a future large gain.
Carryforwards preserve their short-term or long-term character.
Best candidates for harvesting:
For taxpayers with:
Harvesting can add 0.25–1.0% per year in after-tax return. Over decades, that compounds to meaningful wealth.
For smaller taxable accounts, the administrative burden often outweighs the benefit. Many roboadvisors and brokerages now automate tax-loss harvesting for a small fee.
The Tax Harvesting page in Horizons identifies potential harvesting candidates across your taxable accounts. The engine models expected tax savings from harvesting scenarios and their impact on long-term after-tax wealth.
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Known limitations
Sources
Educational information distilled from the Horizons engine methodology — not individual financial advice.
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Capital Gains Tax
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