The 60 Day Qualified Dividend Rule | White Coat Investor (2024)

I have written many times before about tax-loss harvesting. Tax-loss harvesting is when you sell a security in a taxable/non-qualified/brokerage account at a loss and immediately buy something very similar to it but not, in the words of the IRS, “substantially identical” to it. Up to $3,000 a year of those losses can be deducted from your ordinary income and unlimited amounts can be used to offset both short and long-term capital gains from fund distributions and selling appreciated shares.

If you combine tax-loss harvesting with the step-up in basis at death and/or the contribution of appreciated shares to charity, it can be a very powerful technique that allows you to invest VERY tax-efficiently in a taxable account. You can also give appreciated shares to someone in a lower tax bracket and let them sell them, just beware of the federal and state estate/gift tax exemptions (up to $15K per person per year doesn't count toward the $11.4M exemption on the federal side, but some states have much lower limits).

Don't Reinvest Dividends in Taxable

The Wash Sale

However, sometimes people get so excited about tax-loss harvesting that they start doing it very rapidly and run into some problems.

The most common problem is doing a “wash sale.” This occurs when you buy an investment within 30 days before or after the time you sell it. While you are allowed to do that, doing so is a “wash sale” and you cannot now claim that loss on your taxes. The brokerage firms like Vanguard, Fidelity, Schwab, and eTrade are very good at keeping track of this stuff so long as you are doing all of your buying and selling at their brokerage/mutual fund firm. If you have multiple accounts at multiple firms, they won't be able to help you and you'll need to keep track of it yourself–the rules still apply.

In fact, the rules even apply if you sell one fund in your taxable account and buy it within 30 days before or after the sale in your IRA. Some have even speculated that this “IRA Rule” applies to your 401(k)s. It seems likely to definitely apply to your individual 401(k), but whether it applies to an employer's 401(k) is a little less clear. The most conservative avoid it, while the more cavalier are well aware that neither IRAs nor 401(k)s actually report your specific investments to the IRS and spend much less time worrying about this issue.

So the biggest thing to worry about with regards to the wash sale rules is selling and buying and selling and buying too fast. For example, if you exchange from the Vanguard Total Stock Market Fund to the Vanguard 500 Index Fund (not substantially identical but still with a 0.99 correlation) and then back to the Total Stock Market Fund two weeks later, you've done a wash sale. Likewise, if you buy the Total Stock Market Fund two weeks before exchanging some other shares of the fund to the 500 index fund (although note if you also sell the TSM shares you just bought, that is not a wash sale). This is a good reason not to put a taxable investing program on autopilot with frequent purchases. Less frequent, larger purchases are much easier to keep track of for tax-loss harvesting purposes.

That's exactly what burns people when it comes to reinvesting dividends. While I reinvest all my dividends in IRAs and 401(k)s, I do not do so in a taxable account. It creates lots of tiny tax lots that can be complex to keep track of (although the brokerages do a nice job), but most importantly, it means I'm buying a fund as frequently as every month, making it very tricky to avoid wash sale rules. So my general advice is don't reinvest your dividends in taxable in any investment with potential to appreciate (obviously it's fine in a fund where all returns are paid out regularly such as a money market fund or hard money loan fund.)

Beware the 60-Day Qualified Dividend Rule

Most people who have been tax-loss harvesting for a while know all about the wash sale rules (and have likely violated them once or twice.) What they may not be aware of, however, is the 60-day rule for qualified dividends. Stock dividends (including those distributed through a mutual fund) are either qualified with the IRS or non-qualified (like bond dividends.) The idea behind qualifying some dividends and not others is to encourage long-term investment. So one of the qualified dividend rules is that you must hold the investment for at least 60 days around the ex-div date (i.e. when the dividend is paid). So perhaps 45 days before the ex-div and 15 days after. Or 10 days before and 50 days after. If you don't hold the stock or fund that long, the dividend is NOT qualified, meaning you'll pay taxes on it at your higher ordinary income tax rate instead of the lower qualified dividend rate. That could mean paying up to 20% more in taxes on those gains.

So the bottom line is don't get into the habit of frenetically harvesting losses. Not only are you more likely to end up with a wash sale, but you may turn dividends that would otherwise be qualified into non-qualified dividends.

What do you think? Have you screwed up either the wash sale rule or the 60-day rule? What happened? How do you invest tax-efficiently in a taxable account? Comment below!

The 60 Day Qualified Dividend Rule | White Coat Investor (2024)

FAQs

What is the 60 day rule for qualified dividends? ›

A dividend is considered qualified if the shareholder has held a stock for more than 60 days in the 121-day period that began 60 days before the ex-dividend date.2 The ex-dividend date is one market day before the dividend's record date.

What is the 60 day dividend rule for tax loss harvesting? ›

The wash-sale rule is an IRS regulation that prohibits investors from using a capital loss for tax-loss harvesting if the identical security, a “substantially identical” security, or an option on such a security has been purchased within 60 days of the sale that generated the capital loss (30 days before and 30 days ...

What is the wash-sale rule for white coat investors? ›

You need to ensure that you do not perform a “wash sale” (when you buy shares of a security within 31 days before or after selling other shares of that security) and that you do not turn what would otherwise be a qualified dividend into an unqualified dividend by holding that security for less than 60 days around the ...

What is the 60 day rule for mutual funds? ›

Short-term trading fees: If a trader sells certain non-transaction fee funds within 60 days of purchase, they may have to pay a short-term trading fee. Transaction fees: For some no-load funds, transaction fees may apply to purchases but not sales.

What is the 60 day rule for investing? ›

The rule requires you to deposit all your funds into a new individual retirement account (IRA), 401(k), or other qualified retirement account within 60 days of the distribution. If you fail to meet the 60-day deadline, your retirement funds will be subject to income taxes.

What is the 61 day rule for dividends? ›

The fund must have held the security unhedged for at least 61 days out of the 121-day period that began 60 days before the security's ex-dividend date. (The ex-dividend date is the date after the dividend has been paid and processed and any new buyers would be eligible for future dividends.)

What is the last day I can sell stock for tax-loss? ›

However, there is no such grace period for tax-loss harvesting. You need to complete all of your harvesting before the end of the calendar year, Dec. 31. So set that egg timer and get to work.

Can I offset capital gains with capital losses from previous years? ›

You can carry over capital losses indefinitely. Figure your allowable capital loss on Schedule D and enter it on Form 1040, Line 13. If you have an unused prior-year loss, you can subtract it from this year's net capital gains.

How to avoid taxes when selling stocks? ›

9 Ways to Avoid Capital Gains Taxes on Stocks
  1. Invest for the Long Term. ...
  2. Contribute to Your Retirement Accounts. ...
  3. Pick Your Cost Basis. ...
  4. Lower Your Tax Bracket. ...
  5. Harvest Losses to Offset Gains. ...
  6. Move to a Tax-Friendly State. ...
  7. Donate Stock to Charity. ...
  8. Invest in an Opportunity Zone.
Mar 6, 2024

Is wash sale rule 30 or 60 days? ›

Is a Wash Sale Window 30 or 60 Days? A wash sale is a total of a 60-day window—starting from 30 days before the sale to 30 days after the sale.

How do you get around the wash sale rule in day trading? ›

To avoid a wash sale, you could replace it with a different ETF (or several different ETFs) with similar but not identical assets, such as one tracking the Russell 1000 Index® (RUI). That would preserve your tax break and keep you in the market with about the same asset allocation.

What is the wash sale rule for 61 days? ›

The wash-sale rule keeps investors from selling at a loss, buying the same (or "substantially identical") investment back within a 61-day window, and claiming the tax benefit.

How does the 60-day rule work? ›

A 60-day prescription allows patients to get twice the medication on a single prescription. How many patients are set to benefit? It is estimated that when fully implemented, more than 6 million Australians will lower their annual medicine cost and may need fewer visits to their prescriber and pharmacist.

What is the 60-day rule? ›

You have 60 days from the date you receive an IRA or retirement plan distribution to roll it over to another plan or IRA. The IRS may waive the 60-day rollover requirement in certain situations if you missed the deadline because of circ*mstances beyond your control.

What is the exception to the 60-day rollover rule? ›

Close-Up on the 60-Day Rule

You may also owe the 10% early distribution penalty if you're under age 59½. However, the IRS can waive the 60-day rule if two conditions are met: You suffer a casualty, disaster or other event that's beyond your reasonable control.

What are the IRS rules for qualified dividends? ›

Qualified dividends, as defined by the United States Internal Revenue Code, are ordinary dividends that meet specific criteria to be taxed at the lower long-term capital gains tax rate rather than at higher tax rate for an individual's ordinary income. The rates on qualified dividends range from 0 to 23.8%.

How do you avoid tax on qualified dividends? ›

Strategies such as contributions to retirement accounts and health savings accounts (HSAs) may reduce your income below the zero-capital gains tax threshold. As a result, you wouldn't owe any taxes on qualified dividends.

How long do you have to hold a stock to get a qualified dividend? ›

So, to qualify, you must hold the shares for more than 60 days during the 121-day period that starts 60 days before the ex-dividend date. If that makes your head spin, just think of it like this: If you've held the stock for a few months, you're likely getting the qualified rate.

What is the 45 day dividend rule? ›

The 45-Day Rule requires resident taxpayers to hold shares at risk for at least 45 days (90 days for preference shares, not including the day of acquisition or disposal) in order to be entitled to Franking Credits.

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