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Originally Posted by chichirone
Talking to my financial advisor yesterday, he mentioned tax considerations when investing in dividends. Warned us we would pay regular income tax rates versus the 15-20% I read on this site and elsewhere. Also, he mentioned qualified and unqualified dividends. I tried to research and on www.dividends.com the 2012 fiscal cliff legislation that went into effect kept capital gains and dividend taxes at 15%, unless adjusted gross income is over $400kind/$450kcouple, raising it to 20%. However, there is a statement that unqualified dividends would be taxed at the regular income tax schedule up 39.6%.
So what constitutes qualified versus unqualified? And if I check the box to reinvest dividends, I'm guessing they go down as income but are they taxed at 15-20% or at my personal income tax rate based upon total earnings? I've got an email out to my accountant as well. I'm not trying to play a tax scheme here, just trying to understand the differences between the two types of dividends.
On a better note, my advisor did say we have learned something that takes many 20+ years to figure out. Dividend stocks that combine growth and a healthy dividend return are better during downturns and also allow you to buy shares at a lower average cost if reinvested during growth years, prior to the need to take the cash payout. He said, keep it up and my goal should be to put him out of a job! Thanks to all that contribute to this thread. It has really opened up our eyes to different avenues to grow our wealth and invest to have our "employees" work harder for us.
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I would FIRE your "financial advisor" instantly and never give him another chance. He doesn't know what he's talking about and obviously missed the most basic education. He either doesn't understand -- or doesn't know how to explain your situation or worse.
He's doing the "typical" advice -- trying to make investing scary and difficult - so that you need him/her.
CAVEAT ---- EVERYONE SHOULD DISCUSS THEIR SITUATION WITH THEIR TAX ACCOUNTANT....
Capital gains --- there are TWO TYPES --- "Long Term" which means ONE YEAR AND ONE DAY.... of holding the investment -- if you sell for a gain - it would be LONG TERM CAPITAL GAINS.
Short term capital gains is any other type of gain - where you did not hold the investment the ONE YEAR AND ONE DAY requirement to make it a Long Term Capital Gain. SHORT TERM CAPITAL GAINS are taxed at ordinary income rates.
COPIED FROM THE IRS WEBSITE:
The tax rates that apply to net capital gain are generally lower than the tax rates that apply to other income. For 2014,
the maximum capital gains rate for most people is 15%. For lower-income individuals, the rate may be 0% on some or all of the net capital gain. Special types of net capital gain can be taxed at 25% or 28%.
If you're married and filing jointly and your adjusted gross income is over $457,600 your tax rate will be 20%
I certainly hope you're in that bracket!
DIVIDENDS --- (of which you would need to really try hard to buy something that was "unqualified") are taxed at the Dividend rate which is the same at Long Term Capital Gains:
Long-term capital gains and qualified dividends
A top rate of 15% applies to qualified dividends and the sale of most appreciated assets held over one year (28% for collectibles and 25% for depreciation recapture) for single filers with taxable income up to $406,750 ($457,600 for married filing jointly). Long-term capital gains or qualified dividend income over that threshold are now taxed at a rate of 20%.
MORE INFO HERE:
http://www.schwab.com/public/schwab/...axes-Whats-New
I will tell you from my own personal situation -- and I have a quite complicated tax filing. 2013's income tax form was 154 pages.... and our income was just under one million dollars this year.... and my tax rate was 20%. I DO NOT have a lot of deductions - but I have ZERO EARNED INCOME... so all our taxes are dividends - interest - long or short term capital gains.