Mark-to-Market (MTM) Election: Pros, Cons, and the April 15 Deadline
Weigh the Section 475(f) mark-to-market election for traders: ordinary treatment, no wash sales, and no $3,000 cap versus losing long-term rates.
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Section 475(f) mark-to-market is the most consequential election a US trader can make. Done right it removes the wash-sale rule and the $3,000 ordinary-loss cap. Done wrong it taxes every long-term holding at ordinary rates forever.
What MTM Does
- Converts all gains and losses on covered securities to ordinary income/loss.
- At year-end, every open position is deemed sold at fair market value and reopened at that price.
- Eliminates the wash-sale rule for covered securities.
- Removes the $3,000 capital-loss limitation — unlimited ordinary loss deduction against all income.
Eligibility
Only a trader qualifying for Trader Tax Status may elect. Investors cannot. The election covers securities (Section 475(f)(1)) or commodities (475(f)(2)) — file separately for each.
The Deadline Trap
- Existing trader: must file a statement of election by April 15 of the tax year you want it to apply (the original due date, not extended).
- New trader: must elect by the original due date of the prior year's return — meaning you elect before you begin trading in earnest.
A late election requires a private letter ruling from the IRS — expensive ($3,000+ user fee) and not guaranteed.
Pros
- Unlimited loss deduction in a bad year — full ordinary deduction against wages and other income.
- No wash sales — harvest losses freely without substitute-security gymnastics.
- Simplified accounting — year-end true-up, no carrying disallowed losses forward.
- Losses are not subject to capital-loss carryback/carryforward limits.
Cons
- No long-term capital gains — even a position held two years is ordinary income, taxed up to 37% instead of 20%.
- Year-end MTM gain acceleration — unrealized profits on December 31 are taxed now, requiring cash for tax before realization.
- Section 163(j) interest limitation can cap business interest and related expense deductions.
- State conformity varies — California does not conform to federal 475, creating dual bookkeeping.
- Binding without revocation unless you file a formal (and time-limited) revocation.
Decision Framework
Elect MTM when your strategy is high-frequency, short-holding, loss-heavy, and tax-rate-insensitive (you are already in the top bracket, so ordinary vs long-term rarely matters). Skip it if you hold swing positions that would otherwise qualify for long-term rates.
Action Points
- Model three years of your actual trades under both regimes before electing.
- Calendar the April 15 election deadline — it is unforgiving.
- Confirm state conformity; if non-conforming, budget for parallel accounting.
- Keep a written trading plan demonstrating TTS — MTM without TTS is invalid and disallowed retroactively.
MTM is a one-way door. Treat the election as permanent and model its cost across a full market cycle, not a single year.
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