Say I have some money in stocks, should I be selling them 1 year + day every year to limit future tax burden if I'm making $0 in income?

    Someone posted $49,450 is the long term capital gains you get taxed 0% on (+ standard dividend?).

    So, I should obviously sell my stocks up to that profit limit every year, right? And just do this every single year forever, right?

    Going $0 income with long term capital gains, should I always be selling and rebuying stocks up to the taxable limit every year to be taxed 0%?
    byu/Suitable-Economy-346 intax



    Posted by Suitable-Economy-346

    3 Comments

    1. Why not? Any year you have potential tax but aren’t even covering the min allowance at $0 (with standard deduction) is a lost year.

      My retirement plan follows a similar logic to keep my tax bracket at 10 (or 12%) maximum even though I’m at 24% working today.

    2. Agitated_Car_2444 on

      LTCG is 0% for taxable income up to $47,025:

      [https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc409](https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc409)

      Standard deduction gives you another $15,750 to play with.

      If you have no other income I’d certainly suggest taking long term capital gains and possibly Roth conversions and/or IRA deductions (and any other taxable withdrawals) within these limits.

      Just watch out for wash sales.

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