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Income Tax vs. Capital Gains Tax: Differences

Save money at tax time by understanding which tax applies to what income

Reviewed by Lea D. UraduFact checked by Jared EckerReviewed by Lea D. UraduFact checked by Jared Ecker

Income tax is paid on earnings from employment, interest, dividends, royalties, or self-employment, whether it’s in the form of services, money, or property. Capital gains tax is paid on income that derives from the sale or exchange of an asset, such as a stock or property that’s categorized as a capital asset. Below is a primer on their differences and how to use this information to help lower your taxes.

Key Takeaways

  • The U.S. income tax system is progressive, with rates ranging from 10% to 37% of a filer’s yearly income. Rates rise as income rises.
  • For tax purposes, short-term capital gains are treated as ordinary income on assets held for one year or less.
  • Long-term capital gains are given preferential tax rates of 0%, 15%, or 20%, depending on your income level and tax filing status.
  • Long-term capital gains taxes apply to assets held for over a year when sold.
  • Income and capital gains tax brackets are adjusted annually for inflation.

Income Tax

Your income tax percentage varies based on your specific tax bracket, and this depends on how much income you make throughout the entire calendar year. Tax brackets also vary depending upon whether you file as an individual or jointly with a spouse. For the 2023 and 2024 tax years, federal income tax percentages range from 10% to 37% of a person’s taxable yearly income after deductions.

The U.S. has a progressive tax system. Lower-income individuals are taxed at lower rates than higher-income taxpayers on the presumption that those with higher incomes have a greater ability to pay more.

However, the progressive system is marginal. That means that segments of your income are taxed at different rates. For example, the rates for a single filer in 2023 are as follows:

  • 10% on income up to $11,000
  • 12% on income over 11,000 to $44,725
  • 22% on income over $44,725 to 95,375
  • 24% on income over $95,375 to $182,100
  • 32% on income over $182,100 to $231,250
  • 35% on income over $231,250 to $578,125
  • 37% on income over $578,125

Thresholds are slightly higher for 2024:

  • 10% on income up to $11,600
  • 12% on income over 11,600 to $47,150
  • 22% on income over $47,150 to $100,525
  • 24% on income over $100,525 to $191,950
  • 32% on income over $191,950 to $243,725
  • 35% on income over $243,725 to $609,350
  • 37% on income over $609,350

Capital Gains Tax

Tax rates on capital gains depend on how long the seller owned or held the asset. Short-term capital gains, for assets held for one year or less are taxed at ordinary income rates. However, if you held an asset for more than a year, then more preferential long-term capital gains rates apply. These rates are 0%, 15%, or 20%, depending on your income level.

For 2023, a single filer pays 0% on long-term capital gains if their income is $44,625 or less; 15% if it’s over $44,625 to $492,300; and 20% if their income exceeds $492,300.

For 2024, the thresholds are slightly higher: a single filer pays 0% on long-term capital gains if their income is $47,025 or less. The rate is 15% if the person’s income is from over $47,025 to $518,900. It’s 20% if income is over $518,900.

Important

An individual must pay taxes at the short-term capital gains rate, which is the same as the ordinary income tax rate, if an asset is held for one year or less.

How to Calculate a Capital Gain

The amount of a capital gain is arrived at by determining your cost basis in the asset. If you purchase a property for $10,000, for example, and spend $1,000 on improvements, then your basis is $11,000. If you then sell the asset for $20,000, your gain is $9,000 ($20,000 minus $11,000).

Income Tax vs. Capital Gains Tax Example

Joe Taxpayer earned $35,000 in 2023. He pays 10% on the first $11,000 of income and 12% on the income he earned beyond that, up to $44,725 (35,000 – $11,000 = $24,000). His total tax liability is $3,980.00 ($1,100.00 + $2,880).

If Joe sells an asset that produced a short-term capital gain of $1,000, then his tax liability rises by another $120 (i.e., 12% x $1,000). However, if Joe waits one year and a day to sell, then he pays 0% on the capital gain.

Advisor Insight

Donald P. Gould
Gould Asset Management, Claremont, Calif.

The IRS separates taxable income into two main categories: “ordinary income” and “realized capital gain.” Ordinary income includes earned wages, rental income, and interest income on loans, CDs, and bonds (except for municipal bonds). A realized capital gain is the money from the sale of a capital asset (stock, real estate, etc.) at a price higher than the one you paid for it. If your asset goes up in price but you do not sell it, you have not realized your capital gain and therefore owe no tax.

The most important thing to understand is that long-term realized capital gains are subject to a substantially lower tax rate than ordinary income. This means that investors have a big incentive to hold appreciated assets for at least a year and a day, qualifying them as long-term and for the preferential rate.

How Are Capital Gains Taxed?

The rate of tax paid on realized capital gains depends on your total income, filing status, and the length of time you held the asset before selling. If you sell an asset at one year or less of ownership, the profit is considered a short-term capital gain and will count as ordinary income. It will be taxable based on your federal income tax bracket. Profits made on assets sold after lengthier holding periods are considered long-term capital gains and taxed separately at a lower rate.

What Is the Income Threshold for Capital Gains Tax?

For the 2023 tax year, individual filers won’t pay capital gains tax if their total taxable income is $44,625 or less. For 2024 returns, that threshold rises to $47,025.

Will Realized Capital Gains Push Me Into a Higher Income Tax Bracket?

That depends on whether the capital gains are long term or short term. The profit made on assets sold after a year may push you into a higher capital gains tax bracket but will not affect your ordinary income tax bracket because such gains are not treated as ordinary income.

Assets sold within a year receive less favorable treatment. Short-term gains count as ordinary income and, therefore, could push you into the next marginal ordinary income tax bracket.

The Bottom Line

The difference between the income tax and the capital gains tax is that the income tax is applied to earned income and the capital gains tax is applied to profit made on the sale of a capital asset.

The capital gains tax can be either short term (for a capital asset held one year or less) or long term (for a capital asset held longer than a year). Long-term capital gains cannot push you into a higher income tax bracket. Only short-term capital gains can accomplish that, because those gains are taxed as ordinary income. So any short-term capital gains are added to your income for the year.

Be sure to check income tax and capital gains income brackets each year because the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) typically adjusts them annually due to inflation.

Read the original article on Investopedia.

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