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Why Care?

  • A taxable brokerage account is the wealth-building vehicle you use after exhausting your tax-advantaged options. The Money Guy Show’s Financial Order of Operations makes the sequencing clear: (1) cover your deductibles, (2) capture every dollar of employer match, (3) eliminate high-interest debt, (4) max your HSA, (5) max your 401(k)/403(b), (6) fund a Roth IRA, (7) then invest additional capital in a taxable brokerage account. Jumping to the brokerage while leaving steps 1–6 incomplete is leaving money on the table.

  • Once you've maxed your tax-advantaged accounts (401(k), IRA, HSA), a brokerage account is where the rest of your investable capital belongs.

  • Complete investment flexibility — individual stocks, ETFs, index funds, bonds, options, REITs — with no restrictions on what you can buy or when you can sell.

  • Unlike retirement accounts, there are no required minimum distributions and no age restrictions. This makes brokerage accounts particularly valuable for early retirees or those pursuing FIRE.

  • Tax efficiency matters in a brokerage account in ways it doesn't in tax-advantaged accounts. Understanding capital gains, tax-loss harvesting, and asset location can meaningfully improve after-tax returns.

Top Tips:

  1. Max your tax-advantaged accounts first. 401(k), IRA, and HSA contributions should generally be prioritized due to their superior tax treatment.

  2. Hold tax-efficient investments in your brokerage. Index funds, ETFs, and individual stocks held long-term are more tax-efficient than actively managed funds or bonds.

  3. Understand long-term vs. short-term capital gains. Assets held more than one year are taxed at the lower long-term rate (0%, 15%, or 20%). Selling before one year triggers ordinary income tax rates.

  4. Use tax-loss harvesting strategically. Selling positions that are down to offset realized gains reduces your tax bill. Watch the wash-sale rule — you can't repurchase the same security within 30 days.

  5. Keep it simple. A three-fund portfolio (US stocks, international stocks, bonds) or a single total-market ETF outperforms most sophisticated strategies after taxes and fees.

  6. Choose a low-cost broker. Fidelity, Schwab, and Vanguard offer $0 commissions and excellent index fund options.

Advice From The Experts

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Grafton, Dahn, and Family LLC

EST. 2023

Disclaimer:

All information provided by Grafton, Dahn, and Family (DBA WY Value Partners) is for general informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment, financial, tax, or legal advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. We make no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, or suitability of any information on this site. You assume full responsibility for any actions taken based on this content. Please consult a licensed professional regarding your specific situation.

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