Tax-loss harvesting is one of the most powerful — and underused — strategies available to investors with taxable brokerage accounts. The concept is straightforward: when an investment in your portfolio has declined in value below what you paid for it, you sell it to "realize" the loss. That realized loss can then be used to offset capital gains from other investments you sold at a profit during the same tax year.
For example, if you sold Stock A for a $5,000 profit and Stock B for a $3,000 loss, you only owe capital gains tax on the net $2,000 gain. If your losses exceed your gains, you can deduct up to $3,000 of excess losses against ordinary income per year, and carry any remaining losses forward to future years indefinitely.
This strategy only works in taxable accounts — not in IRAs, 401(k)s, or other tax-advantaged retirement accounts where gains and losses have no immediate tax impact. The key insight is that you are not abandoning your investment thesis: after selling at a loss, you can immediately reinvest in a similar (but not "substantially identical") asset to maintain your market exposure.
