How to Legally Avoid Capital Gains Tax on Mutual Funds
how to avoid capital gains tax on mutual funds
how to avoid capital gains tax on mutual funds

In the long run, if you sell an investment asset for a profit you will owe capital gains taxes. But for active investors, it’s important to understand that the IRS gives you a few ways to defer those taxes. This kind of tax planning can be particularly useful with more complicated products like a mutual fund. If you’re looking to avoid getting hit with a tax bill the next time you move money around, here are some ways to manage your assets.

For proper tax planning to get ahead of any potential liability, you can also work with a financial advisor who specializes in tax.

Capital Gains Taxes and Mutual Funds

Mutual funds are a popular investment vehicle because of the balance they can potentially bring to your portfolio. Not everyone thinks about the potential tax consequences of investing in a mutual fund before taking the plunge but it’s important to understand before you invest. There are two main ways that you pay taxes on a mutual fund.

  • Ordinary Income Tax: If you have an income-generating fund, you might pay ordinary income taxes on the money the fund distributes. Yields such as interest and non-qualified dividends are taxed as ordinary income for the year in which you receive them, and many mutual funds generate those payments.

  • Capital Gains: The much more common way is through capital gains taxes. You owe capital gains taxes on the profit that you make whenever you sell an investment asset or receive qualified dividend payments. So, for example, say you bought into a mutual fund at $100 per share and you sold it for $150. You would owe capital gains taxes on the $50 of profit that you collected from that sale.

You can also owe capital gains taxes based on the fund’s activity. A mutual fund is a portfolio of underlying assets. Each share represents a percentage of ownership of those assets as a whole. When a mutual fund sells assets in its portfolio for a gain it can, under most circumstances, do one of two things. Sometimes the fund will reinvest the proceeds in new assets. Other times, however, the fund will pass the proceeds from any sale back to its investors on a per-share basis in what is known as a “capital gains distribution.”

In most, if not all, cases, when a mutual fund is competently managed you will not see any tax consequences from a reinvestment. However, if you receive a capital gains distribution you may owe capital gains taxes on that money. This is how mutual funds can cause tax events for their investors even if you don’t sell a single share.

How To Manage Mutual Fund Capital Gains Taxes

how to avoid capital gains tax on mutual funds
how to avoid capital gains tax on mutual funds

So how can you manage capital gains taxes on your mutual funds? There are a few ways that you can go about it, including: