Taxes and Funds: Uncle Sam's Share
Getting a check from the mutual funds you hold outside your employer retirement plan or IRA might seem like a great thing. But in fact, it's a good news, bad news situation. The good news: You've made some money. The bad news: So has Uncle Sam.
Investors in conventional mutual funds can get stuck with a tax bill on their mutual fund holdings, even if they've lost money since they've held the fund. Like all investors, fund investors have to pay taxes on dividends from stocks and interest from bonds, and they also have to pay taxes on all fund distributions, including capital gains, which occur when a fund manager sells an underlying holding for more than its purchase price.
So even if you're a buy-and-hold investor, you'll probably still have to pay taxes on your funds each year, whether or not you reinvest your payments back into the funds. And, unfortunately, you have no control over when or how much a mutual fund might pay out.
To minimize the tax bite in taxable accounts, consider looking for funds that don't pay out a lot of dividends or capital gains. One of the best ways to do that is to look up your fund on Morningstar.com and click on the Tax tab on the navigation bar at the top of the page to get a glimpse of that fund's tax profile. Generally speaking, there are two types of funds that tend to be tax-friendly. Large-cap index funds (such as S&P 500 index funds) are great for accounts outside your DC plan or IRA, because they rarely sell stocks—meaning they rarely pay out taxable capital gains Additionally, funds with turnover rates of less than 25% a year are generally considered fairly tax-efficient.
Another option are tax-managed funds, which try to keep income and capital gains to a bare minimum. You also may want to look at index funds, which are passively managed funds that try to match the returns of the market index and make portfolio changes only when the index constitutes a change. A manager in active manager fund generally trades a lot more than index fund as his or her strategy is to try to beat the market.
But don't go too far in your quest for tax-efficiency-after-tax returns are what matter most. You may be better off in a tax-inefficient fund with great returns than in a fund that's highly tax-efficient but with lower returns.
 
> Home
> Glossary
> Support
Questions & Answers
  Finding a tax-friendly fund is most important for people:  
Who need to invest outside of their DC plan and IRA accounts.  
Who only invest in their DC plan.  
Who like to pay taxes.  
 
    Learn More  
    > Taxes and Funds: Uncle Sam's Share
> Tax-Efficient Funds: More Dollars per Gallon
 
  © 2025 Morningstar Investment Management LLC