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December 30, 2024
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I keep seeing the 3k limit on capital gains but what if you have a much larger loss against a large gain?

  • December 30, 2024
  • 2 replies
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Say I have a total capital gain on sale of stock of $50k, but I have a loss of another stock of $10k (assume all long term).  Is the $10k completely offsetting the gain for a total of $40k total taxable gain (50 minus 10) the same year or will I still hit the $3k limit and trigger the need for a carry-over?

 

Best answer by M-MTax

$40K would be your net capital loss. However, only $3,000 may be used to offset other income in any year.

 

@JaimeCLT has a capital gain of $50k and a capital loss of $10k, @Mike9241 

 

The capital loss offsets $10k of the cap gain so the net capital gain is $40k. The $3k limit against all other income doesn't come into play.

2 replies

December 30, 2024

 

 

 

misread your thread. @M-MTax is correct. net $40 capital gain 

M-MTax
M-MTaxAnswer
December 30, 2024

$40K would be your net capital loss. However, only $3,000 may be used to offset other income in any year.

 

@JaimeCLT has a capital gain of $50k and a capital loss of $10k, @Mike9241 

 

The capital loss offsets $10k of the cap gain so the net capital gain is $40k. The $3k limit against all other income doesn't come into play.

VolvoGirl
Employee
December 30, 2024

If you have investment sale losses, after you subtract the losses from your gains then if you have a net loss, you can only deduct up to 3,000 per year.  The rest you have to carryover.  And you can’t skip a year.