E75 - Tax Implications for Low Stress Options: What You Need to Know
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Hans and Brian sit down with the Tax Sherpa team—Neal, Serena, and Fatma —to walk through the tax implications of options trading before it's too late to do anything about it.
Most in the Remnant caucus of the Low Stress Options community haven't filed a tax return reflecting this trading activity yet. They're tracking weekly income in their spreadsheets and assume that's what they'll owe taxes on—but the brokerage statements tell a completely different story. The bottom line? If you're making real money trading options, you need actual tax strategy in place now—not in March when it's too late to make adjustments.
Chapters:
00:00 - Opening segment
02:20 - How options are actually taxed (short-term capital gains, rolling, assignments)
06:05 - Active trader vs passive trader: do you want professional trader status?
08:35 - The $3,000 capital loss limit explained (and why it's basically a slap in the face)
11:05 - Offsetting gains with losses: you can deduct more than $3,000 in the current year
13:45 - Tax loss harvesting and why FREC's approach is interesting
15:00 - How rolling options creates separate taxable events
17:05 - Why the $3,000 limit was never inflation-adjusted (it should be $25-30K today)
18:15 - Gambling losses and why they only offset gambling wins
20:25 - What your brokerage statement will actually show vs what the tracker shows
22:40 - Real estate as a "tax sponge" for offsetting capital gains
24:00 - Interest tracing: deducting policy loan interest on Schedule A
26:00 - Should you use one policy exclusively for investment loans?
28:25 - Why you shouldn't be doing this with TurboTax
29:00 - Mortgage interest deduction limits after the Big Beautiful Bill
35:20 - Using an LLC for trading: real estate, consulting, or all-in-one?
37:55 - Why crypto taxes are endlessly complex (smart contracts, staking, DeFi)
47:15 - Wash sale rule: does getting assigned invoke it?
55:30 - The Tax Sherpa process: survey, planning, execution
Key Takeaways:
Options are taxed as short-term capital gains (at your ordinary income rate) in 99% of cases—each contract is a separate taxable event, so rolling creates multiple transactions
The $3,000 capital loss limit is the NET position—you can offset unlimited gains plus an additional $3,000, then carry forward the remainder into future years
Your brokerage tracker shows return on equity; Schwab reports each individual trade—they're answering different questions, which is why people are often pleasantly surprised at tax time
If you're using policy loans to fund trading, you can deduct the interest on Schedule A through interest tracing—but you have to actually pay it and document the allocation
Professional trader status (mark-to-market accounting) is almost never advantageous unless trading is literally your full-time business with substantial daily activity and deductible expenses
Custodial accounts for kids don't provide much tax benefit due to kiddie tax rules—and they count against the student for financial aid purposes, unlike parent-held assets
Do your tax planning NOW, not in March—once the year is over, you've lost the ability to make strategic adjustments that could save you tens of thousands of dollars
Got Questions? Reach out to us at info@remnantfinance.com or book a call at https://remnantfinance.com/calendar !
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