Capital gains can be a significant source of retirement income, and they're taxed at preferential rates. Understanding how capital gains are taxed in retirement helps you plan strategically and minimize taxes.
How Capital Gains Are Taxed
The Basics
Capital Gains:
- Profit from selling investments
- Taxed at preferential rates (if long-term)
- Why: Encourages long-term investing
Types:
- Long-term: Held 1+ year (preferential rates)
- Short-term: Held <1 year (ordinary income rates)
- Why: Different treatment
Preferential Rates
Long-Term Capital Gains:
- 0%, 15%, or 20% (depending on income)
- Vs. ordinary income: 10-37%
- Why: Significant tax savings
Example: $50,000 long-term capital gain
- At 15%: $7,500 tax
- Vs. ordinary income at 22%: $11,000
- Savings: $3,500
Long-Term vs. Short-Term Capital Gains
Long-Term Capital Gains
Held 1+ Year:
- Preferential tax rates
- 0%, 15%, or 20%
- Why: Encourages long-term investing
Example: Buy stock, hold 2 years, sell for profit
- Long-term: Preferential rate
Short-Term Capital Gains
Held <1 Year:
- Taxed as ordinary income
- 10-37% rates
- Why: Same as wages
Example: Buy stock, hold 6 months, sell for profit
- Short-term: Ordinary income rate
The Difference
Significant Tax Difference:
- Long-term: 0-20%
- Short-term: 10-37%
- Why: Hold investments long-term
Example: $50,000 gain
- Long-term at 15%: $7,500 tax
- Short-term at 22%: $11,000 tax
- Difference: $3,500
2026 Capital Gains Tax Rates
For Single Filers
2026 Rates:
- 0%: Up to $47,025
- 15%: $47,026 - $518,900
- 20%: Over $518,900
- Why: Income-based rates
Plus: 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (if applicable)
For Married Filing Jointly
2026 Rates:
- 0%: Up to $94,050
- 15%: $94,051 - $583,750
- 20%: Over $583,750
- Why: Income-based rates
Plus: 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (if applicable)
How Rates Are Determined
Based on Total Income:
- Ordinary income + capital gains
- Capital gains "stack on top"
- Why: Progressive system
Example: $60,000 ordinary income, $30,000 capital gains
- Total: $90,000
- Capital gains in 0% bracket (under $94,050)
- Capital gains tax: $0
Capital Gains and Other Income
How They Interact
Capital Gains Stack on Top:
- Ordinary income first
- Capital gains on top
- Why: Determines bracket
Example:
- Ordinary income: $70,000
- Capital gains: $30,000
- Total: $100,000
- Capital gains in 0% bracket: $0 tax
The 0% Bracket Opportunity
If Total Income Low:
- Capital gains may be in 0% bracket
- Why: Significant opportunity
Example: Married, $60,000 ordinary income
- Can have $34,050 capital gains at 0%
- Tax: $0 on capital gains
Bracket Management
Manage Total Income:
- Keep total income in lower bracket
- Capital gains at 0% or 15%
- Why: Minimize tax
Example:
- Need to stay under $94,050 for 0% capital gains
- Manage ordinary income + capital gains
- Result: 0% on capital gains
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Strategies to Minimize Capital Gains Tax
Strategy 1: Hold Long-Term
Hold 1+ Year:
- Qualify for long-term rates
- 0-20% vs. 10-37%
- Why: Significant savings
Example:
- Hold 11 months: Short-term, 22% tax
- Hold 13 months: Long-term, 15% tax
- Savings: 7% from waiting 2 months
Strategy 2: Time Sales Strategically
Sell in Low-Income Years:
- Lower total income
- Capital gains in lower bracket
- Why: Lower tax rate
Example:
- Year 1: Low income, sell $50,000 gain (0% bracket)
- Year 2: High income, would be 15% bracket
- Savings: $7,500 from timing
Strategy 3: Stay in 0% Bracket
Manage Total Income:
- Keep under $94,050 (married)
- Capital gains at 0%
- Why: Tax-free capital gains
Example:
- Ordinary income: $60,000
- Capital gains: $30,000
- Total: $90,000
- Capital gains tax: $0 (0% bracket)
Strategy 4: Tax-Loss Harvesting
Offset Gains with Losses:
- Realize losses to offset gains
- Reduce taxable gains
- Why: Lower tax
Example:
- $50,000 capital gain
- $20,000 capital loss
- Taxable gain: $30,000 (not $50,000)
Strategy 5: Coordinate with Other Income
Plan Total Income:
- Coordinate capital gains with other income
- Manage total to stay in lower bracket
- Why: Minimize overall tax
Tax-Loss Harvesting
How It Works
Realize Losses:
- Sell investments at a loss
- Offset capital gains
- Why: Reduce taxable gains
Example:
- $50,000 capital gain
- $30,000 capital loss
- Taxable gain: $20,000 (not $50,000)
The Wash Sale Rule
Can't Buy Back Immediately:
- 30 days before or after
- Why: Prevents abuse
Example:
- Sell stock at loss
- Can't buy same stock: Within 30 days
- Can buy similar stock: Different enough
Annual Limits
Net Capital Losses:
- Can deduct up to $3,000/year
- Carry forward excess
- Why: Limits annual deduction
Example:
- $10,000 capital loss
- $5,000 capital gain
- Net loss: $5,000
- Deduct: $3,000 this year, $2,000 next year
Coordination with Retirement Income
Social Security Impact
Capital Gains Count in Combined Income:
- Increases combined income
- Makes more Social Security taxable
- Why: Combined income formula
Example:
- Social Security: $30,000
- Capital gains: $40,000
- Combined income: $40,000 + $15,000 = $55,000
- More Social Security taxable: Due to capital gains
IRMAA Impact
Capital Gains Count in MAGI:
- Increases MAGI
- May trigger IRMAA
- Why: Income-based Medicare premiums
Example:
- MAGI: $190,000
- Capital gains: $30,000
- New MAGI: $220,000
- IRMAA: $140/month ($1,680/year)
Coordination Strategy
Time Capital Gains:
- In low-income years
- Before Social Security
- Why: Minimize other tax impacts
Example:
- Year 1: Low income, realize capital gains
- Year 2: Social Security starts, less capital gains
- Result: Less Social Security taxable
Real Examples
Example 1: 0% Capital Gains Bracket
Situation: Married, $60,000 ordinary income, $30,000 capital gains
Total Income: $90,000
Capital Gains Tax: $0 (0% bracket, under $94,050)
Tax Savings: $4,500 (vs. 15% rate)
Example 2: 15% Capital Gains Bracket
Situation: Married, $80,000 ordinary income, $50,000 capital gains
Total Income: $130,000
Capital Gains Tax: $7,500 (15% of $50,000)
Vs. Ordinary Income: Would be $11,000 at 22%
Savings: $3,500
Example 3: Tax-Loss Harvesting
Situation: $50,000 capital gain, $20,000 capital loss
Net Gain: $30,000
Tax: $4,500 (15% of $30,000)
Vs. No Loss Harvesting: $7,500 tax
Savings: $3,000
Example 4: Coordination with Social Security
Situation: $30,000 Social Security, $40,000 capital gains
Combined Income: $40,000 + $15,000 = $55,000
Taxable Social Security: $17,000 (57%)
Tax on Social Security: $3,740 (22% bracket)
Plus Capital Gains Tax: $6,000 (15% of $40,000)
Total Tax: $9,740
Vs. No Capital Gains: $0 capital gains tax, less Social Security taxable
Bottom Line
Retirement and capital gains:
- Long-term capital gains: Preferential rates (0%, 15%, 20%)
- Short-term capital gains: Ordinary income rates (10-37%)
- 0% bracket opportunity: If total income low
- Coordination matters: Affects Social Security tax, IRMAA
- Timing strategies: Sell in low-income years
Key Takeaways:
- Long-term capital gains: Preferential rates (0%, 15%, 20%)
- Short-term capital gains: Ordinary income rates (10-37%)
- 0% bracket opportunity: If total income under $94,050 (married)
- Coordination matters: Affects Social Security tax, IRMAA
- Timing strategies: Sell in low-income years
- Tax-loss harvesting: Offset gains with losses
- Hold long-term: Qualify for preferential rates
Action Steps:
- Understand capital gains tax rates (0%, 15%, 20% for long-term)
- Hold investments long-term (1+ year for preferential rates)
- Time sales strategically (low-income years)
- Stay in 0% bracket if possible (under $94,050 married)
- Use tax-loss harvesting (offset gains with losses)
- Coordinate with other income (Social Security, IRMAA)
- Plan total income (ordinary + capital gains)
- Work with professional if needed
Remember: Capital gains are taxed at preferential rates, but timing and coordination matter. Hold investments long-term for preferential rates, time sales in low-income years, use tax-loss harvesting, and coordinate with other retirement income. The key is understanding how capital gains fit into your overall tax picture and planning strategically.