Reinvesting dividends in a taxable account (2024)

Reinvesting dividends in a taxable account (1) This article contains details specific to United States (US) investors. Parts of it do not apply to non-US investors.

One of the most frequently asked questions on the forum is whether to reinvest dividends in a taxable account. This article discusses the pros and cons of taking dividends in cash in the taxable account. Below, the term "dividends" is used for brevity, but it should be understood as "dividend and capital gain distributions" to be precise.

Pros of taking dividends in cash

It is a good idea to take dividends in cash in several cases:

  • If you are planning to use specific identification of shares, taking dividends in cash avoids creating a lot of small tax lots. You can invest dividends along with new money.
  • If you are planning to tax loss harvest, automatically reinvesting dividends may accidentally trigger a wash sale.
  • If you are investing a relatively small amount of new money compared to the dividends you receive, taking dividends in cash may make rebalancing easier, because you can choose not to put any new money (including dividends) into an outperforming fund.
  • If you have difficulty maxing out tax-advantaged accounts from your paycheck, and taking dividends from your taxable account would allow you to max out your tax-advantaged accounts, you may want to take dividends in cash and use the cash to max out your tax-advantaged accounts. (This situation may apply if you have inherited a large taxable account, or have built a large taxable account after ignoring the benefits of tax-advantaged accounts for many years.)
  • If your taxable account has a fund that is less than ideal but remains a suitable holding, you might want to take dividends in cash from that fund. For example, if you have Vanguard 500 Index Fund with a large amount of unrealized capital gains, and your asset allocation calls for Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund for domestic stocks, you may want to take dividends from Vanguard 500 Index Fund in cash to avoid investing more money into Vanguard 500 Index Fund.
  • If you are retired and drawing income from taxable accounts, taking dividends and capital gains distributions in cash simplifies your tax accounting.[note 1]

Cons of taking dividends in cash

Although taking dividends and capital gain in cash generally simplifies cost basis accounting, there are several caveats.

  • If you have your mutual fund or brokerage automatically reinvest distributions back into a fund with a purchase fee, shares purchased with the distributions are not subject to the purchase fee (at Vanguard, the Vanguard Global Ex-US Real Estate Index Fund imposes a purchase fee). However, the savings with automatic reinvestment are extremely small. If you assume 2% distributions from a fund with a 0.75% purchase fee, the purchase fee is 0.02% of the fund balance.
  • If you have your mutual fund or brokerage automatically reinvest distributions back into a fund with a permanent redemption fee (such as, for example, the Vanguard Global Ex-US Real Estate Index Fund), shares purchased with distributions are subject to the fee. However, if the fund imposes a short-term redemption fee, shares purchased with distributions are usually not subject to a redemption fee if you redeem them within the short-term redemption fee period. This feature is specific to a fund.
  • There is a small opportunity cost for not investing dividends immediately. See Delaying reinvestment of dividends for more details.

Observations

  • There is no extra tax cost for reinvesting dividends, compared to receiving cash and buying shares. Either way, the newly-added shares have a basis which you subtract from the sale price of those shares to compute the capital gain when you sell.
  • Taking dividends in cash does not require you to use specific identification of shares or do tax loss harvesting.
  • If you are planning to use average cost basis, the reinvested shares will have the same average basis as all previous shares. If your next transaction in the fund is to sell shares, you will probably have a taxable capital gain, which you could have avoiding by taking the dividend in cash. Therefore, you will have an extra tax cost if you reinvest the dividend when you are likely to need to sell shares, either to spend money or to rebalance out of the fund.
  • The share price in a bond fund does not vary significantly, so there is little potential tax cost to reinvesting dividends and selling those shares later. (However, because most bond funds distribute dividends monthly, you will always have a wash sale if you sell any shares for a capital loss, which is an accounting complication even if it does not cost you a significant amount in taxes.)

Notes

  1. Vanguard lists the following common sources of retirement income:[1]
    • Social security
    • Pensions
    • Part-time employment
    • Trust income
    • Rental income
    • Required minimum distributions
    • Dividend, interest, and capital gains from taxable accounts
    If these sources of income are more than enough for your needs, you can take income distributions from the taxable account in cash and reinvest in your taxable portfolio, just as you might do during the accumulation stage. If these income sources do not provide you with enough income, consider additional sales from the taxable account.

See also

  • Cost basis methods

References

  1. Colleen M. Jaconetti; Maria A. Bruno (2008). "Spending from a Portfolio: Implications of Withdrawal Order on Taxable Investor" (PDF). Vanguard Investing Counseling & Research. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 17, 2011.
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Tax considerations

Tax basics
  • Foreign tax credit
  • Marginal tax rate
  • Modified Adjusted Gross Income
  • Progressive tax
  • State income taxes
  • Tax basics
  • Tax news sources
  • Taxable account
  • Taxable equivalent yield
  • Taxable equivalent yield (math)
Strategic
tax considerations
  • Federal tax credits for individuals
  • Gift tax
  • Tax-efficient fund placement
  • Tax-adjusted asset allocation
  • Tax-managed fund comparison
Tax management
  • Delaying reinvestment of dividends
  • Donating appreciated securities
  • Estimated tax
  • Paying a tax cost to switch funds
  • Placing cash needs in a tax-advantaged account
  • Reinvesting dividends in a taxable account
  • Saver's credit
  • Social Security tax impact calculator
  • Tax analysis (math)
  • Tax estimation tools
  • Taxation of Social Security benefits
  • Timing of transactions to reduce taxes
Tax loss harvesting
  • Cost basis methods
  • Specific identification of shares
  • Tax loss harvesting
  • Wash sale
Tax gain harvesting
  • Tax gain harvesting
Payroll taxes
  • Payroll deductions
  • Cafeteria plan deductions
  • FICA tax deductions
  • Social Security as an investment
Tax data
  • IRS tax statistics
  • Vanguard fund distributions
Non-US
tax management
  • Non-US investor's guide to navigating US tax traps
  • Nonresident alien's ETF domicile decision table
  • Nonresident alien taxation
  • Nonresident alien investors and Ireland domiciled ETFs
  • Passive foreign investment company
  • Passively managing individual stocks
  • Taxation as a US person living abroad
  • US tax pitfalls for a non-US person moving to the US
  • US tax pitfalls for a US person living abroad
  • US domiciled ETFs that are UK HMRC reporting funds
  • v
  • t
  • e

Tax considerations

Tax basics
  • Foreign tax credit
  • Marginal tax rate
  • Modified Adjusted Gross Income
  • Progressive tax
  • State income taxes
  • Tax basics
  • Tax news sources
  • Taxable account
  • Taxable equivalent yield
  • Taxable equivalent yield (math)

Strategic
tax considerations
  • Federal tax credits for individuals
  • Gift tax
  • Tax-efficient fund placement
  • Tax-adjusted asset allocation
  • Tax-managed fund comparison
Tax management
  • Delaying reinvestment of dividends
  • Donating appreciated securities
  • Estimated tax
  • Paying a tax cost to switch funds
  • Placing cash needs in a tax-advantaged account
  • Reinvesting dividends in a taxable account
  • Saver's credit
  • Social Security tax impact calculator
  • Tax analysis (math)
  • Tax estimation tools
  • Taxation of Social Security benefits
  • Timing of transactions to reduce taxes
Tax loss harvesting
  • Cost basis methods
  • Specific identification of shares
  • Tax loss harvesting
  • Wash sale
Tax gain harvesting
  • Tax gain harvesting
Payroll taxes
  • Payroll deductions
  • Cafeteria plan deductions
  • FICA tax deductions
  • Social Security as an investment
Tax data
  • IRS tax statistics
  • Vanguard fund distributions
Non-US
tax management
  • Non-US investor's guide to navigating US tax traps
  • Nonresident alien's ETF domicile decision table
  • Nonresident alien taxation
  • Nonresident alien investors and Ireland domiciled ETFs
  • Passive foreign investment company
  • Passively managing individual stocks
  • Taxation as a US person living abroad
  • US tax pitfalls for a non-US person moving to the US
  • US tax pitfalls for a US person living abroad
  • US domiciled ETFs that are UK HMRC reporting funds

Retrieved from ""

Reinvesting dividends in a taxable account (2024)

FAQs

Should I reinvest dividends in my taxable account? ›

Among other benefits, reinvesting dividends can help you avoid brokerage fees. However, even when you don't receive dividends as cash payouts and reinvest them in additional shares, you still must pay taxes on them. For personalized tax planning assistance, work with a financial advisor.

Should you reinvest dividends in a brokerage account? ›

Given that much higher return potential, investors should consider automatically reinvesting all their dividends unless: They need the money to cover expenses. They specifically plan to use the money to make other investments, such as by allocating the payments from income stocks to buy growth stocks.

What happens when you reinvest dividends? ›

When you reinvest dividends, you gradually increase your position size in a stock. In conjunction with dividend increases, the total amount you receive from the quarterly dividend payment also continues to grow because you own more shares. Your dividend payment gets calculated based on the number of shares you own.

What is it called when you reinvest dividends? ›

A dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP) is a program that allows investors to reinvest their cash dividends into additional shares or fractional shares of the underlying stock on the dividend payment date.

What is the downside to reinvesting dividends? ›

She echoes the feeling of many investment pros when she says, “There is no compelling reason to engage in dividend reinvestment in the new age of zero-commission trading.” These advisers say there are other downsides associated with DRIPs, including the bookkeeping hassles and tax headaches that go along with using ...

When should you not reinvest dividends? ›

There are times when it makes better sense to take the cash instead of reinvesting dividends. These include when you are at or close to retirement and you need the money; when the stock or fund isn't performing well; when you want to diversify your portfolio; and when reinvesting unbalances your portfolio.

Are reinvested dividends taxed twice? ›

Dividends are taxable regardless of whether you take them in cash or reinvest them in the mutual fund that pays them out. You incur the tax liability in the year in which the dividends are reinvested.

Should retirees reinvest dividends? ›

The key is to start early, invest wisely, and reinvest your dividends so your portfolio can continue to grow. Of course, there's no guarantee that you'll be able to retire on dividends alone. But since you're here reading our detailed guide on how to retire on dividends, you're already on the right track to success.

How to reinvest profits to avoid tax? ›

7 ways to minimize investment taxes
  1. Practice buy-and-hold investing. ...
  2. Open an IRA. ...
  3. Contribute to a 401(k) plan. ...
  4. Take advantage of tax-loss harvesting. ...
  5. Consider asset location. ...
  6. Use a 1031 exchange. ...
  7. Take advantage of lower long-term capital gains rates.
Jan 20, 2024

What is the safest investment with the highest return? ›

Here are the best low-risk investments in April 2024:
  • High-yield savings accounts.
  • Money market funds.
  • Short-term certificates of deposit.
  • Series I savings bonds.
  • Treasury bills, notes, bonds and TIPS.
  • Corporate bonds.
  • Dividend-paying stocks.
  • Preferred stocks.
Apr 1, 2024

Do dividends count as income? ›

Key Takeaways. All dividends paid to shareholders must be included on their gross income, but qualified dividends will get more favorable tax treatment. A qualified dividend is taxed at the capital gains tax rate, while ordinary dividends are taxed at standard federal income tax rates.

Why do companies pay dividends instead of reinvesting? ›

Arguments for Dividends

Proponents of dividends point out that a high dividend payout is important for investors because dividends provide certainty about the company's financial well-being. Typically, companies that have consistently paid dividends are some of the most stable companies over the past several decades.

Does drip avoid taxes? ›

If you reinvest your dividends through a DRIP, you'll pay taxes as though you'd taken the dividend in cash. You'll receive a Form 1099-DIV detailing your dividend income for the tax year.

Should I reinvest capital gains in a taxable account? ›

Capital gains generated by funds held in a taxable account will result in taxable capital gains, even if you reinvest your capital gains back into the fund. Thus, it may be smart not to reinvest the capital gains in a taxable account so that you have the cash to pay the taxes due.

Do index funds automatically reinvest dividends? ›

Dividends paid by index mutual funds can be automatically reinvested (fee-free!) into more shares of the fund. However, when an ETF pays a dividend, you'll need to use the proceeds to buy more shares, incurring additional commissions and spending time logging into your account to make a quick trade.

How much dividend income is tax free? ›

Your “qualified” dividends may be taxed at 0% if your taxable income falls below $44,625 (if single or Married Filing Separately), $59,750 (if Head of Household), or $89,250 (if (Married Filing Jointly or qualifying widow/widower) (tax year 2023). Above those thresholds, the qualified dividend tax rate is 15%.

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