SPONSORED RESULTS about Capital Gains taxes:
Capital gains tax rates
There are six different capital gains tax
rates: 5%, 8%, 10%, 20%, 25%, and 28%. Different tax rates
apply to each type of gainful sale you have.
Rates
depend upon three things:
• your income
or, in other words, the tax bracket you
occupy,
• how long you had the investment or
asset
• what type of asset it is - investment,
collectible or real estate.
Let's go over each one
of these variables separately.
The amount of time
you've owned an investment or asset decides whether the
gain is classified as long-term or short-term.
Short
term gains are the gains produced by selling an investment or
asset you've owned for a year or less. These are taxed
at the same rate as your other income.
Long-term gains,
which are the gains produced by selling and investment you've
owned for more than a year, are taxed at lower rates.
Depending upon your other income, long-term gains are subject
to a capital gains tax between 8% and 28%.
Sidebar
With multiple selling
points and different types of assets, figuring your capital
gains tax rates can get complicated. But if you are prepared,
and file electronically, the process
becomes much simpler.
The type of investment can determine tax rates too
Investments are subjected to different tax
rates depending on your income and how long you've owned
them.
However, an automatic 28% tax rate is
applied to any capital gain accrued from the sale of
collectibles and a 25% tax rate is applied to the capital gain
from the sale of real estate.
As you can see, you
do have some control over these rates, so when you sell your
investments you should take these influencing factors into
consideration.
It is generally beneficial to
hold onto your investments for longer than a year as to avoid
paying a higher tax on them.
But don't make the mistake
of thinking it is necessary to hold onto an investment that is
losing money. If it is losing money, there will be no gain,
and therefore there will be no tax.
Next:
how the tax basis and
selling method of assets affect capital gains tax
rates.
Related IRS publications
You can get more information about capital
gains tax rates directly from the IRS, in the form of IRS Publication 550.
If you file a
paper return, you will also have to fill out Schedule D and possibly Schedule D-1. If you file electronically, all this will be taken
care of for you electronically.
Note: you will need an Adobe Acrobat
Reader to view these publications, which you can get here. (But you probably already have
it.)