To be eligible for the 0% capital gains, the taxpayer can't make more then $32,550 if you are single or $65,100 if you are married filing jointly. This includes the sale of your stock. So, in other words if you are single and make $20,000 and sale $13,000 in stock you will have to pay capital gains on the $500 over the cut off. In addition, you cannot get the incredible tax rate if you have not held the stock for at least a year.
The law did have a loophole, and tax advisor's were quick to advise their clients to give stock to their kids, who traditionally are taxed at a lower rate. Upon learning of this Congress acted just as quickly to close, what the USA Today referred to as a "Hummer size loophole."
But lawmakers weren't happy to hear that parents were planning to exploit the zero-percent capital gains rate, says Ed Slott, an accountant and IRA expert in Rockville Centre, N.Y. "Their intent," he says, "was for retired people to pay a lower rate, not for rich people to shift money to younger kids."
So Congress broadened the "kiddie tax," which taxes a child's investment income at the parents' top marginal rate. The kiddie tax kicks in once a child's unearned income — such as from interest and capital gains — exceeds a certain level. For 2007, that level is $1,700.
- USA Today
So it sounds like this new year may be the year to unload some stock that you may have been thinking of selling.
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