Fidelity flags a $3,000 tax break most Americans overlook

You probably lost money on at least one investment last year. Maybe the stock dropped, or maybe a fund underperformed. Most people look at those losses and feel frustrated.

But Fidelity Investments says those losses could be doing something valuable for you right now. The brokerage giant published a tax strategy guide, and it highlights a break built into the IRS code.

It does not require itemizing, and it does not require a financial advisor. You just need to know the rule exists.

The payoff is not abstract; Fidelity found that its average managed-account client using tax-smart strategies saved $4,126 per year in taxes.

One piece of that puzzle starts with a single number: $3,000.

The $3,000 capital loss deduction you probably missed

If you sell an investment for less than you paid, you create a capital loss. You can use that loss to offset any capital gains you earned that year. 

If your losses exceed your gains, the IRS lets you deduct up to $3,000 of the remaining loss against your ordinary income. If you are married, and filing separately, the limit is $1,500.

Any unused losses beyond that carry forward to future tax years. There is no expiration date, so you can keep applying it until every dollar of loss has been used.

Fidelity says taxes quietly drain 2% from your returns every year

The $3,000 rule is just one piece of a broader strategy Fidelity calls tax-smart investing. Fidelity cites Morningstar data covering a 98-year period from 1926 to 2023. Taxes reduced stock returns from 10.3% to 8.3% per year, and bond returns fell from 5.1% to 3.0%.

That 2% annual drag compounds over time, and across a 30-year investing career, it can mean the difference between a comfortable retirement and falling short of your goals.

Tax-loss harvesting is the foundation of the strategy

You sell investments at a loss and replace them with similar holdings. That triggers the deductible loss without changing your overall portfolio allocation.

There is a critical catch: The IRS enforces a wash-sale rule. You cannot buy a substantially identical security within 30 days of the sale.

If you sell an S&P 500 index fund, you cannot buy the same fund back within that window. You can buy a different fund that tracks a similar index. A total stock market fund keeps your exposure intact while remaining compliant.

HSA contributions are tax-deductible, and growth is tax-free.

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Three Fidelity moves that lower your taxable income beyond harvesting

The $3,000 deduction may draw the most attention, but Fidelity’s guide lays out a full playbook for keeping more of your money.

Max out your tax-advantaged accounts in 2026

The IRS raised the 401(k) contribution limit to $24,500 for 2026. That is up $1,000 from 2025. Workers aged 50 and older can add $8,000 in catch-up contributions.

Those aged 60 to 63 qualify for the SECURE 2.0 super catch-up of $11,250.

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IRA contribution limits rose to $7,500, and savers 50 and older can add a new $1,100 catch-up contribution. Every dollar you contribute to a traditional 401(k) or IRA reduces your taxable income.

If you are in the 24% bracket, maxing out a $24,500 contribution saves you $5,880 in federal taxes alone.

Use your HSA as a stealth retirement account

Fidelity highlights health savings accounts as one of the most powerful tax tools available. The IRS set 2026 HSA limits at $4,400 for individuals and $8,750 for families, and those 55 and older can add $1,000.

HSAs deliver a triple tax advantage; contributions are tax-deductible, and growth is tax-free. Withdrawals are also tax-free for qualified medical expenses.

Fidelity recommends paying current medical bills with cash. Let HSA funds grow for decades, and then use the account in retirement, when health care costs peak.

Manage your bracket deliberately to avoid creep

A year-end bonus, severance, or home sale can push you into a higher bracket. Fidelity recommends deferring discretionary income when possible.

In a low-income year, consider a Roth IRA conversion. You pay taxes on the converted amount at a lower rate. Then the money grows and comes out completely tax-free in retirement.

Fidelity’s deduction strategies go beyond the standard amount

For 2026, the standard deduction is $16,100 for single filers and $32,200 for joint filers, per the IRS. About 90% of Americans take it.

But Fidelity’s guide highlights a tactic called charitable bunching. Instead of donating $5,000 each year, you donate $15,000 in a single year. That pushes your total deductions above the standard deduction threshold.

Tax benefits of charitable bunching

You itemize in the year you bunch your donations. You take the standard deduction in the other years, and over a three-year cycle, you claim more total deductions.

  • A donor-advised fund lets you take the deduction upfront and distribute to charities over time.
  • Donating appreciated stock avoids capital gains tax on the donated shares.
  • Medical expenses exceeding 7.5% of your AGI are deductible if you itemize.

Seniors get a new $6,000 bonus deduction in 2026

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act introduced a $6,000 bonus deduction for taxpayers 65 and older. It is available to both itemizers and standard deduction filers.

The deduction phases out for single filers above $75,000 and joint filers above $150,000. It stacks on top of the existing age-based standard deduction, and a single filer over 65 could see combined deductions topping $24,000 in 2026.

  • Tax-smart investing decisions keep your money growing.
  • Your investment choices directly affect your tax bill. Not all holdings create the same drag.
  • Short-term versus long-term gains: The rate gap is massive.

Selling an asset you held for 12 months or less triggers ordinary income tax rates. The combined rate can reach 40.8% with the 3.8% net investment income tax. Hold for longer than 12 months, and the top federal rate drops to 23.8%. That gap alone is reason to think twice before selling winners early.

Pick tax-efficient investments for taxable accounts

Passive index funds and ETFs generate fewer taxable events than actively managed funds. Municipal bonds are typically exempt from federal taxes. State-specific muni funds may avoid state taxes, too.

Fidelity recommends placing less tax-efficient investments in tax-advantaged accounts. Keep index funds and ETFs in your taxable brokerage accounts. This does not change your overall investment mix. It puts each holding where it generates the least tax impact.

Your next steps to claim the $3,000 tax deduction this year

You do not need to wait until December. Tax-loss harvesting works best when you review your portfolio throughout the year.

A practical 2026 tax-savings checklist

  • Review your brokerage account for positions trading below your purchase price.
  • Identify holdings where selling triggers a usable loss.
  • Replace sold positions with similar, not identical, funds to maintain your allocation.
  • Track your net capital loss to claim the full $3,000 deduction.
  • Carry forward any unused losses to future tax years.
  • Confirm your 401(k), IRA, and HSA contributions are on track for 2026 limits.

When you should consider professional help

Fidelity Regional Vice President Lou Gentile frames it directly. Your taxes affect what you earn, what you keep, and how much you can spend.

If you have multiple account types, significant gains, or a complicated tax picture, a financial advisor or tax professional can spot moves you might miss. The cost of advice often pays for itself.

But even if you handle your own taxes, the $3,000 rule gives you a tool most people ignore. This year, you should use it.

Related: Fidelity shares 5 steps to rebuild your retirement after a setback