The Daily Beacon
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When you sell a stock when do you pay taxes?

You generally must pay capital gains taxes on the stock sales if the value of the stock has gone up since you’ve owned it. Capital gains tax on stock you’ve had for more than a year is generally lower than ordinary income tax. If you’ve had the stock for less than a year, you simply pay your ordinary income rate.

If you sold stocks at a profit, you will owe taxes on gains from your stocks. If you sold stocks at a loss, you might get to write off up to $3,000 of those losses. And if you earned dividends or interest, you will have to report those on your tax return as well.

When to report stock sale on tax year?

In almost all cases, the trade date controls the tax-reporting year for a stock sale. That is, if you sell stock by the last trading day of this year, you report the sale on this year’s taxes. The exception occurs when you close out a short sale for a loss, in which case the settlement date controls the reportable tax year.

How to calculate tax loss on stock sale?

If you want to trigger a relatively small tax bill, select the shares in the stock position that would produce the smallest possible capital gain when sold. If you have a large capital gain elsewhere that you’d like to offset, consider selling any shares that might generate a large capital loss.

What kind of taxes do you pay on sale of stock?

Ordinary income tax rates generally apply to certain money you’ve been paid, such as salaries, professional fees, and interest. But those rates also apply to the gains you’ve realized from the sale of a capital asset like stock that you’ve owned for one year or less.

When do you get taxed on stock options?

This tax treatment is the same for all types of exercises. The amount of taxable income and the withholding calculation are based on the stock’s value when your company initiates the share-transfer process (usually the vesting date) and not when the stock appears in your brokerage account.