Tax Implications of Options Trading: 2026 Trader’s Guide
The tax implications of options trading in 2026 come down to four core rules: most equity options profits are taxed as short-term capital gains at your ordinary income rate (up to 37%), broad-based index options like SPX qualify for Section 1256 treatment with a favorable 60/40 long-term/short-term split, the IRS wash sale rule absolutely applies to options on substantially identical securities, and assignment or exercise changes your cost basis in ways that catch most traders off guard at tax time. With hot CPI data reviving Fed rate-hike bets this spring and the VIX spiking, active traders are stacking short-term gains and losses at record speed, which makes 2026 the worst possible year to get sloppy with your records. This guide walks you through exactly how the IRS treats your options trades, the traps that trigger surprise tax bills, and the tactics that legally cut your liability before the December 31 deadline.
Equity options held under one year are taxed as short-term capital gains at ordinary income rates, while Section 1256 contracts (SPX, NDX, RUT, futures options) get a blended 60% long-term / 40% short-term rate no matter how long you hold them. The wash sale rule fully applies to options, and assignment is not a taxable event for the option itself, it just adjusts the cost basis of the underlying stock.
What You’ll Learn
- How the IRS classifies your options trades and why Section 1256 contracts are a tax cheat code
- The wash sale rule for options and the “substantially identical” traps that wipe out your losses
- Exactly what happens at tax time when you get assigned, exercise, or let an option expire
- Loss harvesting moves you can run before year-end to legally lower your 2026 bill
- How to reconcile your broker’s 1099-B with your own records (and why you must)
How Does the IRS Tax Options: Short-Term vs Long-Term and Section 1256?
The IRS taxes most equity options as capital gains, and the holding period determines the rate. Hold an option position for one year or less and any profit is short-term capital gain, taxed at your ordinary income rate up to 37%. Hold longer than one year and it becomes long-term capital gain, taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on your bracket.

Here’s the catch: most options traders rarely hold positions long enough to qualify for long-term treatment. If you’re running weekly calls, 0DTE setups, or even 30-45 DTE swing trades, every winner is a short-term gain. That’s why understanding the tax implications of options trading matters more for active traders than for buy-and-hold investors.
A special IRS category covering broad-based index options (SPX, NDX, RUT, VIX), futures contracts, and futures options. Gains are taxed 60% at long-term rates and 40% at short-term rates, regardless of holding period. Positions are also “marked to market” at year-end, meaning open trades are treated as sold on December 31 for tax purposes.
This 60/40 split is huge. If you’re in the 32% bracket trading SPX options, your blended rate drops to roughly 24%, compared to the full 32% you’d pay on SPY options held for the same period. The IRS publishes the rules under IRS Publication 550, which is the source document every serious trader should bookmark.
Quick Comparison: Equity Options vs. Section 1256 Contracts
| Feature | Equity Options (SPY, AAPL) | Section 1256 (SPX, NDX) |
|---|---|---|
| Tax Treatment | Short or long-term by holding period | Always 60% long / 40% short |
| Year-End Treatment | Only closed trades reported | Mark-to-market (open trades count) |
| Wash Sale Rule | Applies | Does NOT apply |
| Tax Form | Form 8949 / Schedule D | Form 6781 |
With volatility spiking on the recent CPI surprise, traders rotating from SPY to SPX aren’t just chasing better liquidity. They’re getting a meaningful tax discount on every profitable trade. If you trade indices heavily, this single change can be worth thousands per year.
How Does the Wash Sale Rule for Options Work?
The wash sale rule for options disallows your loss if you buy a “substantially identical” security within 30 days before or after closing the losing position. The disallowed loss isn’t gone forever, it gets added to the cost basis of the replacement position, but it can wreck your tax planning if you’re not paying attention.

Here’s where most traders get burned: the IRS treats options on the same underlying as potentially substantially identical to the stock and to other options on that stock. Sell AAPL stock at a loss, then buy AAPL calls within 30 days? Wash sale. Close a losing SPY put, then open another SPY put at a different strike? The IRS can argue that’s a wash sale too.
Wash sales triggered late in the year are especially dangerous. If you close a loser in December and re-enter in early January, the disallowed loss rolls into the new position, pushing your tax bill into the current year while deferring the deduction. Round-tripping the same ticker across the calendar boundary is the single most common tax mistake active traders make.
The good news: Section 1256 contracts are exempt from the wash sale rule. SPX, NDX, and futures options can be closed for a loss and re-entered the same day with no wash sale consequences. This is another reason index options dominate among serious tax-conscious traders.
If you trade a margin account aggressively across multiple correlated tickers, your wash sale exposure compounds fast. Understanding the structural differences between a margin vs cash account matters for both risk and record-keeping reasons. The FINRA wash sale guidance is worth reading start to finish.
What Is the Options Assignment Tax Treatment?
Options assignment is not itself a taxable event for the option, it’s a cost basis adjustment to the underlying stock. When your short put gets assigned, you buy the stock and the premium you received reduces your cost basis. When your covered call gets assigned, you sell the stock and the premium adds to your sale proceeds.

Expired options are simple: the premium is a 100% gain (if you sold) or a 100% loss (if you bought), taxed based on your holding period. Exercised long options also fold into the underlying stock’s basis. The premium you paid is added to your purchase price (for calls exercised) or subtracted from your sale price (for puts exercised).
Hypothetical Example: Covered Call Assignment
Let’s walk through a hypothetical example. You own 100 shares of XYZ purchased at $50. You sell a covered call with a $60 strike for a $2 premium ($200 total) expiring in 30 days. The stock rallies to $65 and you get assigned at $60.
- Stock sale proceeds: $6,000 (100 x $60) + $200 premium = $6,200 effective sale price
- Cost basis: $5,000 (100 x $50)
- Capital gain: $1,200, taxed based on how long you held the stock, not the option
The option premium gets rolled into the stock transaction. You don’t report the call separately. This is why covered call income strategies have such favorable tax mechanics, especially when paired with long-term stock holdings. The same logic applies to the put-side of a wheel strategy for income: assigned puts reduce your stock cost basis, deferring the tax event until you eventually sell the shares.
If you’re running the wheel strategy and want to convert short-term gains into long-term ones, let assigned shares sit for 366+ days before selling. Your premium from the original put becomes part of the long-term capital gain on the eventual stock sale, taxed at the lower rate.
Understanding taxes is one piece of the puzzle. Reading a trade plan with clear levels and risk zones is another.
Our alerts come with the full reasoning, key support and resistance levels, and risk zones so you can learn how trades are structured, not just what to buy.
How the End of the PDT Rule Reshapes Your 2026 Tax Bill
The SEC’s elimination of the Pattern Day Trader rule in mid-2026 unlocked something the IRS and most retail traders haven’t fully priced in: a surge in active intraday trading from accounts that were structurally blocked by the old $25,000 minimum. More day trades from more accounts means more short-term gains, more wash sale exposure, and more 1099-B reconciliation pain. The rules in this guide didn’t change. How aggressively they apply to your account did.
Three knock-on effects matter for your tax bill in 2026:
- More trades, more short-term gains. If your trade count tripled this year, your short-term capital gain pile likely tripled with it. Without disciplined harvesting and Section 1256 rotation, your effective tax rate climbs in lockstep with your activity.
- Wash sale exposure compounds. The 30-day rule does not care how many tickets you fired off. The more you cycle the same ticker across loss-and-reentry, the more wash sale adjustments stack up. With higher trade frequency, the odds of accidentally disallowing a meaningful loss go up sharply.
- Section 1256 strategy gets more valuable, not less. SPX, NDX, and futures options were already tax-advantaged. With PDT gone and more retail money rotating into intraday strategies, the gap between paying 37% on SPY scalps versus a blended ~24% on SPX scalps compounds across hundreds or thousands of new trades. For active traders, this is the single biggest tax move available this year.
Post-PDT, the trader who ignores taxes until April is the trader who hands the IRS the largest share of their year. Higher trade volume should trigger tighter discipline on harvesting, journaling, and product selection, not looser. The end of the PDT rule made active trading more accessible. It did not make it more tax-efficient.
If you are one of the traders who only recently scaled past 4 day trades per week, the practical move is to set up your tax workflow before December, not during it. Pick a journal you will actually use, decide now whether SPX makes sense for your strategies, and book a session with a trader-aware CPA before tax season floods their calendar.
What Are the Best 2026 Tax-Smart Tactics for Options Traders?
The three highest-leverage moves for 2026 are tax loss harvesting before December 31, ruthless trade journaling, and a manual reconciliation of your broker’s 1099-B against your own records. Brokers get options trades wrong on 1099-B forms more often than most traders realize, and the IRS uses what the broker reports as the default.

Tax Loss Harvesting Without Triggering Wash Sales
Loss harvesting means deliberately closing losing positions to offset gains. With the recent volatility surge from hot CPI prints, plenty of traders are sitting on losers right now. The rule of thumb: harvest losses in November and early December, then wait at least 31 days before re-entering the same or substantially identical position.
If you must stay in the market for that ticker, rotate to a different (non-substantially-identical) underlying or use Section 1256 index options as a parking lot. Losses you can’t use this year carry forward indefinitely against future capital gains, plus $3,000 per year against ordinary income.
Record Keeping and 1099-B Reconciliation
Your broker’s 1099-B is a starting point, not a final answer. Common errors include missing wash sale adjustments, incorrect cost basis on assigned shares, and Section 1256 contracts mislabeled as regular short-term gains. You have to catch these yourself.
The fix is a trade journal you actually maintain. Tools like tracking trades with tradervue let you reconcile every fill against the 1099-B before filing. The fifteen minutes a week you spend logging trades saves hours of tax-time pain, plus likely thousands in misreported gains.
- Trade SPX/NDX for 60/40 treatment
- Journal every fill, every week
- Harvest losses by mid-December
- Reconcile 1099-B line by line
- Hold assigned shares 366+ days when possible
- Round-tripping losers across year-end
- Trusting the 1099-B without review
- Trading SPY when SPX is available
- Forgetting wash sales on options
- No records beyond broker statements
If you’re trading actively under the 2026 rule changes after end of the PDT rule, your trade count is likely higher than ever. More trades means more tax events, more wash sale potential, and more reasons to nail your record keeping. Pair tight tax discipline with solid options risk management rules and you protect both your P&L and your post-tax returns.
Every rule in this guide ties back to one of these primary sources. Bookmark the list. When something on your 1099-B looks off, this is where you start.
- Publication 550 — Investment Income and Expenses
The single most important IRS document for traders. Covers capital gains and losses, the wash sale rule, Section 1256 contracts, straddles, and short sale rules in depth.
- Topic 429 — Traders in Securities
The IRS framework for who qualifies as a trader vs. an investor, and how the mark-to-market election under Section 475(f) changes your tax treatment. Required reading if you trade full time.
- Publication 551 — Basis of Assets
How cost basis works, including the adjustments that happen when options are assigned, exercised, or expire. Essential for getting wheel, covered call, and assigned-stock taxes right.
- Form 6781 — Section 1256 Contracts and Straddles
Where you report SPX, NDX, RUT, VIX, and futures-options gains and losses for the 60/40 tax treatment. If you trade index options at all, this form is on your return.
- Form 8949 — Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets
The per-transaction detail form for equity-options trades. Every closed contract gets a line here before rolling up into Schedule D.
- Schedule D (Form 1040) — Capital Gains and Losses
The summary schedule that consolidates Form 8949 detail and any Section 1256 results from Form 6781 into a single net capital gain or loss line on your return.
- Form 1099-B — Proceeds From Broker Transactions
What your broker reports to you and the IRS for each closed position. This is the document you reconcile against your own trade journal before filing.
- Topic 409 — Capital Gains and Losses
The short, plain-English overview of holding-period rules, short-term vs. long-term rates, and the $3,000 net loss limit. The fastest IRS page to skim when you need a refresher.
Source documents only. This list is for education, not tax advice. For your specific return, work with a trader-aware CPA.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I pay taxes on options trades if I lose money for the year?
No, net losses aren’t taxed. You can deduct up to $3,000 of net capital losses against ordinary income each year and carry the rest forward indefinitely. You still must report every trade on Form 8949 and Schedule D, even at a net loss.
Are SPX options really tax-advantaged compared to SPY?
Yes. SPX qualifies as a Section 1256 contract, so all gains are taxed 60% long-term and 40% short-term regardless of how long you held the position. SPY is a regular equity option, fully short-term unless held over a year. For active traders, the SPX tax savings often outweigh any difference in commissions or liquidity.
Does the wash sale rule apply if I trade options in an IRA?
The wash sale rule technically still applies, but losses inside an IRA aren’t deductible anyway, so it rarely matters. However, if you sell a stock for a loss in your taxable account and buy the same stock or call options on it inside your IRA within 30 days, that wash sale is permanently disallowed. This is one of the most overlooked traps in retirement account trading.
How are 0DTE options taxed?
Same-day options are always short-term capital gains if equity-based (SPY, QQQ), or 60/40 if index-based (SPX, NDX). The holding period is the entire issue, since by definition you never hold long enough for long-term treatment. This is exactly why active 0DTE options trading belongs on index products whenever possible.
Do I need a CPA to file options taxes?
If you trade more than a few dozen times a year, yes, hire a CPA who specializes in trader taxation. The wash sale calculations, Section 1256 reporting on Form 6781, and 1099-B reconciliation get complex fast. The cost is usually a fraction of what a single missed deduction or misreported wash sale would cost you.
Putting It All Together
The tax implications of options trading aren’t a side issue. They’re a core part of your real, after-tax return. A trader who nets 40% gross but loses 15 points to taxes is in the same place as a trader who nets 25% with smart tax planning, except one of them did twice the work to get there.
The 2026 environment with reviving rate-hike fears and elevated volatility is exactly when discipline matters most. Pick the right underlyings (Section 1256 wins for indices), track every fill, harvest losses before year-end, and reconcile your 1099-B by hand. None of this is exciting, but it’s the difference between keeping your trading gains and donating them to the IRS.
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Disclaimer: Pure Power Picks is not a licensed financial advisor. All content is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice. Options trading involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
The PPP Team brings decades of combined experience from some of the most well-known companies in the trading industry. Founded in 2020, Pure Power Picks delivers options trading education, scanner reviews, and trade alerts to help everyday traders develop real skills. Our content is strictly educational.