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The Capital Gains Tax Trap Most Physicians Never See Coming

Capital gains isn't one tax. It's five separate taxes stacking on top of each other.

You spent years building your career.

You bought into a practice.
You invested in real estate.
You accumulated stock and private equity.

Then one day, you sell.

That’s when many physicians discover that capital gains tax is far more complicated—and expensive—than they expected.


The Problem

Most physicians think capital gains are taxed at 15% or 20%.

Not quite.

Depending on the asset, your tax bill can include:

  1. Long-term capital gains tax

  2. Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT)

  3. Depreciation recapture

  4. Cost segregation recapture

  5. State taxes

By the time everything is added together, a large sale can generate a tax bill of several hundred thousand dollars.

And the worst part?

Many of the best planning opportunities disappear once the transaction closes.


The Good News

The tax code contains numerous strategies designed to reduce, defer, or even eliminate capital gains.

Some of the more common include:

Direct Exclusions

  • Section 121 primary residence exclusion

  • Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS)

  • Basis step-up at death

Deferral Strategies

  • 1031 like-kind exchanges

  • Qualified Opportunity Funds

  • Installment sales

  • ESOP transactions

Charitable Strategies

  • Donating appreciated assets directly

  • Donor-advised funds

  • Charitable remainder trusts

  • UPREIT structures

The right strategy depends on the asset, your goals, and your timeline.


The Biggest Mistake Physicians Make

Waiting.

A 1031 exchange can’t be created after the sale.

An installment sale can’t be negotiated after you’ve been paid.

A charitable remainder trust can’t shelter proceeds you’ve already received.

Tax planning is a pre-event activity.

Not a post-event one.


The Bottom Line

Physicians approach patient care systematically:

History.
Diagnosis.
Treatment.
Prevention.

Capital gains planning should be no different.

Understand what triggers the tax.
Know the different layers.
Match the right strategy to the right asset.
Implement the plan before the taxable event occurs.

The physicians who keep the most wealth aren’t necessarily those who earn the most.

They’re the ones who plan ahead.


📅 Are you a physician or dentist looking for legitimate ways to reduce taxes and preserve wealth?

Book a free consult:
https://linktr.ee/drtaxtor

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not legal or tax advice. Individual circumstances vary, and professional advice should be obtained before implementing any tax strategy.

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