Tax Loss Harvesting: Strategies to Maximize Wealth and Minimize Tax

Thayer Partners Thayer Partners October 01, 2025

Master tax loss harvesting for sophisticated investors—timing, rules, and maximizing after-tax wealth.

Understanding the fundamentals and real benefits of tax loss harvesting

Tax loss harvesting is a powerful  portfolio technique that can provide immediate and long-term benefits to high net worth investors. By selling securities at a loss to offset taxable gains, investors can effectively reduce their overall tax liability. This strategic approach increases after-tax wealth, keeps portfolios in sync with risk targets, and helps create flexibility for redeploying capital. The basics are straightforward: realized losses from investments can be used to offset capital gains, and if losses exceed gains, up to $3,000 per year can be deducted from ordinary income, with unused losses carried forward. 

However, practitioners need to move beyond the basics. Successful tax loss harvesting requires a keen understanding of the wash sale rule, which disallows losses if the same or “substantially identical” security is purchased within a 30-day window before or after the sale. The art lies in quickly identifying suitable replacement investments that maintain overall exposure and growth potential. Markets that trend downward or display volatility can be particularly advantageous, enabling more opportunities to realize losses without fundamentally altering the portfolio’s construction.

Key strategies, timing, and common pitfalls for high net worth investors

Key to this strategy is developing a disciplined process. Regularly reviewing portfolios—monthly or quarterly, instead of just year-end—captures more frequent loss opportunities. High net worth investors with complex assets should coordinate harvests across accounts for maximum impact. Tax loss harvesting is particularly valuable for those subject to higher capital gains brackets or facing the Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT).

Timing is also crucial. While market sell-offs are often prime opportunities, forced sales that do not align with long-term strategy may backfire. Investors must avoid the pitfall of disregarding transaction costs, liquidity discounts, or deviating from long-term asset allocation targets. Working closely with a professional ensures that loss harvesting is executed efficiently, without introducing unintended risk. 

Integrating tax loss harvesting with goals, portfolio, and evolving market realities

Effective tax loss harvesting is not a stand-alone tactic, but an integral component of a thoughtful wealth management and investment plan. Pairing it with direct indexing, customizing across asset classes, and optimizing tax locations (what assets are held in taxable vs. tax-deferred accounts) further enhances results. It also supports charitable giving strategies, where low-basis assets are donated to reduce exposure and enhance deductions.

The landscape is evolving. New technology now enables near real-time identification and execution of harvesting opportunities. Working with advisors who use account aggregation platforms and scenario analysis can amplify results and ensure compliance in ever-more digital tax environments. A forward-thinking approach means reviewing the entire portfolio with your wealth advisor—and goals—at least annually to align loss harvesting with both current law and future objectives. 

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This material prepared by Thayer Partners is for informational purposes only.  It is not intended to serve as a substitute for personalized investment advice or as a recommendation or solicitation of any particular security, strategy or investment product.  Thayer Partners is a Registered Investment Adviser. SEC Registration does not constitute an endorsement of Thayer Partners by the SEC nor does it indicate that Thayer Partners has attained a particular level of skill or ability. The material has been gathered from sources believed to be reliable, however Thayer Partners cannot guarantee the accuracy or completeness of such information, and certain information presented here may have been condensed or summarized from its original source.  Thayer Partners does not provide tax or legal or accounting advice, and nothing contained in these materials should be taken as such.

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