Every fall, clients hear “harvest losses” and imagine something complicated or edgy. It does not have to be either. Loss harvesting is a housekeeping move: you bank capital losses without changing the portfolio’s job. The trick is staying invested while the tax slip is printed.
I keep the story simple: we are swapping from A to B for at least 31 days to realize a loss, but we are keeping essentially the same exposure the whole time. If the client can repeat that sentence, you are already ahead of most mistakes.
You do not need to be clever. Examples that generally work in practice:
If overlap feels high, widen the substitute slightly (for example, from “US value” to “US mid value”), then plan the round-trip back if you prefer Fund A long term.
I like two windows a year: one mid-year, one late in the fall. In choppy markets, add opportunistic passes when drawdowns exceed a pre-set threshold for a sleeve (say, down 8 to 10 percent from high water). The rule is not sacred; the predictability helps you avoid rushing.
Index investor, balanced portfolio
Taxable holds a total US ETF and a developed ex-US ETF; bonds live mostly in pre-tax. A September downdraft makes both equity funds harvestable. We swap US total market to a large-blend ETF from a different index family and developed ex-US to a similar proxy. Dividends stop reinvesting for a month. In the IRA and Roth, we avoid buying those two funds during the window. Thirty-one days later we decide whether to stay or round-trip to the originals. Client stays invested throughout, tax lot basis resets lower, and a loss bank appears for future rebalancing.
Active tilt, higher turnover risk
A client owns a small-cap value ETF and a quality tilt ETF in taxable. The small value sleeve is down double digits; quality is flat. We harvest the small value ETF into a different small value index from another sponsor. Because the active tilt in quality might realize short-term gains this year, we harvest enough small value loss to offset a portion of that expected gain. The allocation looks the same on the dashboard. The tax picture looks cleaner in April.
One paragraph does the job: what you swapped and why, the dates that define the wash-sale window, which accounts were coordinated, and the amount harvested. Add a reminder to re-evaluate after 31 days. Future you—and compliance—will thank you.
Clients do not remember basis decimals. They remember whether they stayed invested and whether April felt orderly. If your harvests keep risk steady, improve flexibility on future rebalances, and show up clearly on the tax report, you are doing it right.