Nevada Capital Gains Tax Calculator 2026
Calculate your combined federal + NV state capital gains tax on stocks, crypto, real estate, and other investments. Nevada has no state income tax β you only pay federal capital gains tax.
π Calculate Your Nevada Capital Gains Tax
π Nevada Capital Gains Tax Overview
No state income tax β capital gains tax-free
How Capital Gains Tax Works in Nevada
When you sell an investment β stocks, bonds, cryptocurrency, real estate, or other assets β for more than you paid, the profit is a capital gain. Since Nevada has no state income tax, you'll only owe federal capital gains tax on your profits, making it one of the most tax-friendly states for investors.
Federal Capital Gains Tax Rates (2026)
- 0% rate: Single filers with taxable income up to $47,025 (MFJ: $94,050)
- 15% rate: Single filers $47,025β$518,900 (MFJ: $94,050β$583,750)
- 20% rate: Single filers above $518,900 (MFJ: above $583,750)
- 3.8% NIIT: Net Investment Income Tax applies to income above $200K (single) or $250K (MFJ)
Short-Term vs. Long-Term Capital Gains
Short-term gains (assets held less than 1 year) are taxed at your ordinary income tax rate β which can be as high as 37% federally. Long-term gains (assets held 1+ years) receive preferential federal rates of 0%, 15%, or 20%.
5 Strategies to Reduce Capital Gains Tax in Nevada
- Hold investments for 1+ years β Long-term gains qualify for 0/15/20% federal rates instead of up to 37%
- Tax-loss harvesting β Sell losing investments to offset gains (up to $3,000 excess losses deductible)
- Use tax-advantaged accounts β 401(k), IRA, Roth IRA, HSA shield gains from taxation
- Qualified Opportunity Zones β Defer and potentially reduce capital gains by investing in QOZ funds
- Stay in a no-tax state β Living in Nevada already saves you state tax on all capital gains
Why Investors Choose Nevada
Nevada is one of only 8 states with no state income tax, making it a top destination for investors, retirees, and high-net-worth individuals looking to minimize their tax burden on investment gains. While you still owe federal capital gains tax, the state tax savings can be substantial β especially for large gains from stock sales, business exits, or real estate transactions.