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Rebalancing Frequency and Tax Efficiency Tradeoffs

Rebalancing frequency and tax efficiency tradeoffs cover calendar vs threshold rebalancing, tax-loss harvesting, and turnover targets for taxable accounts.

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#portfolio-theory#money-management
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Rebalancing Frequency and Tax Efficiency Tradeoffs

Rebalancing restores target weights as markets drift. Do it too often and transaction costs and taxes bleed the portfolio; do it too rarely and risk drifts far from target. The right answer is not a frequency — it is a rule that balances drift risk against tax drag.

Calendar vs threshold rebalancing

Calendar (monthly, quarterly, annual): simple, predictable. Annual rebalancing captures most of the diversification benefit with the lowest turnover; monthly over-trades and increases costs.

Threshold: rebalance only when a weight drifts beyond a band, say ±20% of target (a 10% target triggers at 8% or 12%). Threshold rebalancing cuts turnover 30–50% versus calendar with similar risk control.

The evidence favors threshold-with-a-calendar-cap: rebalance when a band is breached, but at least annually to prevent indefinite drift.

The turnover tax math

Every rebalance is a taxable event in a non-sheltered account. Selling the winner to buy the laggard realizes a capital gain now. A 20% turnover portfolio with 8% average gains realizes 1.6% of capital as taxable gains annually. At a 25% long-term rate, that is 0.4% annual drag — more than many active strategies' edge.

Tax-aware rebalancing rules

  1. Rebalance primarily in tax-sheltered accounts (IRA, 401k, SIPP). Trades there are tax-free, so do the high-turnover rebalancing inside the shelter and leave taxable accounts alone.
  2. Use new contributions and withdrawals to rebalance. Adding capital to underweight positions realizes no gain. This is the cheapest rebalancing method.
  3. Harvest losses opportunistically, not on a schedule. When a position is down 10%+ from cost, swap to a similar-but-not-identical asset for 31 days to capture the loss, then swap back. This defers tax without changing exposure.
  4. Long-term only. Never rebalance a position held under 12 months in a taxable account unless the drift is extreme (band breached by 2×). Short-term rates double the tax cost.

Concrete thresholds for a taxable account

  • Rebalance band: ±25% of target weight (wider than tax-sheltered, to reduce triggers).
  • Maximum drift before forced action: ±5 percentage points absolute (e.g., a 10% target at 15% forces a trim).
  • Annual review mandatory regardless of bands.
  • Target turnover: under 25% per year in taxable accounts.

The holding-period discipline

The most tax-efficient portfolio is the one you trade least. A position held for decades compounds at the pre-tax rate; a position rebalanced annually compounds at the after-tax rate. For taxable accounts, the bias should be toward tolerating drift that a tax-sheltered account would not.

Bottom line

In tax-sheltered accounts, rebalance by threshold, annually minimum. In taxable accounts, widen the bands, use contributions to rebalance, harvest losses opportunistically, and never trigger short-term gains for marginal risk control. The tax code is a permanent 20–40% partner in every taxable trade — rebalance as if that matters, because it does.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk