Trader vs Investor Tax Status: Choosing and Defending Your Filing Position
Learn the requirements, benefits, and risks of Trader Tax Status (TTS) versus default investor treatment, including expense deductions and MTM election.
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The IRS treats you as an investor by default. That means capital gains and losses on Schedule D, a $3,000 annual ordinary-loss cap, and investment expenses stuck behind the itemized-deduction wall. Trader Tax Status (TTS) flips this into a business.
Investor Treatment (Default)
- Gains/losses on Schedule D and Form 8949.
- Net losses offset gains, then up to $3,000 against ordinary income; the rest carries forward.
- No deduction for software, data feeds, or home office against trading income.
Trader Tax Status Tests
TTS is a facts-and-circumstances determination. The IRS looks mainly at:
- Substantial activity — typical guideline: 4+ trades nearly every business day, or ~500+ round-trips per year.
- Holdings period — positions usually closed same day or within a few days; few positions held long-term.
- Frequency, regularity, continuity — consistent pattern, not sporadic bursts.
- Intent to profit from short-term market moves, documented in a trading plan.
TTS Benefits
- Deduct trading expenses (data feeds, platform fees, courses, home office, computer) on Schedule C as business expenses.
- Eligible to elect Section 475(f) mark-to-market, which converts gains/losses to ordinary, removes the $3,000 cap, and exempts you from the wash-sale rule.
MTM Election
MTM is optional with TTS. New traders elect by the original due date of the prior-year return; existing traders must elect by April 15 of the tax year they want it to apply. Once made, MTM is binding without formal revocation.
Trade-Offs
- MTM eliminates long-term capital gains rates — every position is ordinary income.
- Subject to the Section 163(j) interest deduction limitation, which can cap expense deductions.
- Recordkeeping burden: per-trade logs, account reconciliations, and a formal trading plan are expected on audit.
Action Points
- Maintain a dated trading plan and a daily trade log — these are your audit armor.
- Run the numbers before electing MTM: if most of your gains would be long-term anyway, the ordinary-rate cost can exceed the wash-sale benefit.
- If TTS but not MTM, still manually track wash sales across all accounts (including spouse's) to avoid surprises on Form 1099-B reconciliation.
TTS is worth claiming only if your activity is genuine and your expenses clear the deduction threshold. Claim it carelessly and you inherit audit risk with no offsetting benefit.
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