KEY POINTS
  • Despite stock market losses in 2022, investors may receive year-end mutual fund distributions, which can trigger a tax bill.
  • Typically, mutual fund payouts happen once per year, by mid-December, after funds announce estimates in late October or early November.
  • However, investors may reduce capital gains through tax-loss harvesting, or using losses to offset profits.

After a rough year for the stock market, investors may not expect to receive a surprise tax bill from year-end actively managed mutual fund payouts, experts say.

When a fund manager sells underlying assets at a profit without losses to offset it, those gains are passed along to investors. The profits are taxable to investors when received in a brokerage account.