TJ · Taxable Brokerage · June 2026

Brokerage Account Dashboard

International diversification + qualified-dividend income — tax-efficient by design

Key milestones

Setup checklist

Target allocation

Two funds, zero overlap with each other or with the Roth IRA

Why these two funds: VXUS captures international diversification and the foreign tax credit — a benefit only available in taxable accounts. VYMI holds 1,600+ international high-dividend stocks, carries a Morningstar Gold rating, and has outperformed SCHY across every time frame (1, 3, and 5 years) at a lower expense ratio — giving genuinely different, non-US income exposure from anything held in the Roth.

Monthly contribution split

How each month's deposit divides between the two funds

Acronyms used on this page

LTCG — Long-Term Capital Gains. Profit from selling an investment you've held over a year. Taxed at the lower 0%/15%/20% rates shown below, instead of your regular income tax rate.

NIIT — Net Investment Income Tax. An extra 3.8% surtax on investment income, but only once your MAGI passes $200,000 (single filer). Mentioned here mainly to confirm it doesn't apply to you yet.

MAGI — Modified Adjusted Gross Income. A specific IRS income figure (close to, but not always identical to, your regular taxable income) used to determine eligibility for things like the NIIT threshold.

FIRE — Financial Independence, Retire Early. Shorthand for your overall goal: building enough invested assets to retire well before the traditional age.

Std. Deduction — Standard Deduction. A flat amount the IRS lets you subtract from your gross income before calculating tax, with no receipts or itemizing required. For 2026, single filers get $16,100 — so your first $16,100 of income isn't taxed at all, and your "taxable income" only starts above that line.

0% LTCG ceiling
$49,450
taxable income, single, 2026
15% LTCG range
$49,451–$545,500
your bracket
Std. deduction
$16,100
single filer, 2026
NIIT threshold
$200,000
MAGI — not applicable to you

Annual tax cost by balance size

BalanceAnnual dividendsTax at 15%After-tax income
Blended expense ratio across both funds is well under 0.10% — negligible drag at any realistic balance size. This table only reflects the 15% federal qualified-dividend tax — it does not include the VXUS foreign tax credit, which is a separate, positive offset (see below).

The 0% capital gains window — FIRE strategy

If taxable income in early retirement stays under $49,450 (2026), long-term capital gains are taxed at 0% federal. With the $16,100 standard deduction, that's up to roughly $65,550 in gross income — including realized gains — before any LTCG tax applies.

Holding brokerage positions long-term rather than trading means unrealized gains accumulated now can potentially be harvested completely tax-free during a low-income FIRE bridge year.

Foreign tax credit — the VXUS bonus

VXUS pays foreign taxes on dividends from international holdings. In a taxable account, you claim this back as a direct credit — typically 0.15–0.25% of the position's value annually. Inside a Roth, this credit is forfeited entirely since there's no tax liability to offset.

On a $50,000 VXUS position, that's roughly $75–125/year in free tax credit — small per year, but compounds in relevance as the position grows.

VYMI qualified dividend treatment

VYMI pays a mix of qualified and non-qualified dividends from its 1,600+ international holdings. The qualified portion is taxed at your preferential 15% rate. Because VYMI holds stocks across developed and emerging markets, the qualified percentage varies year to year — typically 60–75% qualified. The foreign tax credit also applies, partially offsetting withholding taxes paid on foreign dividends, which is a separate positive benefit on top of the dividend income itself. Net effective tax rate on VYMI income in a normal year will typically run below the full 15% once the FTC (Foreign Tax Credit) is factored in.

VXUS — International Total Market

Passive Index Tax-Efficient

Tracks the entire investable world outside the US — developed and emerging markets blended by market cap. Roughly 8,000+ holdings.

0.05%

Expense ratio

~2.5%

Dividend yield

0.85

Beta vs US market

Healthy range for this category:

Expense ratio under 0.10% · Dividend yield 2–4% · Broad diversification (1,000+ holdings) signals low single-country risk.

Red flags to watch for:

Expense ratio above 0.20% for a passive index fund · Heavy concentration in one country or currency · Tracking error consistently above 0.5% versus the stated index.

VYMI — International High Dividend Yield

Dividend ETF Tax-Efficient + Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) Morningstar Gold

Tracks the FTSE All-World ex-US High Dividend Yield Index — 1,600+ international stocks with above-average dividend yields, across developed and emerging markets. Weighted by market cap, weighted toward large stable companies. Excludes REITs. Has outperformed SCHY across 1-year, 3-year, and 5-year horizons.

0.07%

Expense ratio

~3.4%

Dividend yield

−40%

Max drawdown

Performance vs. SCHY (dividends reinvested)

+31.80% vs +21.87%
1-year total return
20.81% vs 14.77%/yr
3-year annualized
13.03% vs 8.59%/yr
5-year annualized

Healthy range for this category:

Expense ratio under 0.10% · Dividend yield 3–5% · Broad diversification (1,000+ holdings) signals low single-country risk. VYMI meets all three.

Red flags to watch for:

Expense ratio drifting above 0.10% · Heavy concentration in one country · Dividend-per-share declining consistently year-over-year (note: VYMI's dividend has fluctuated with currency movements — watch the trend, not any single year).

Known tradeoff — accepted deliberately:

Max historical drawdown of −40% (vs SCHY's −24%) means VYMI falls harder in a genuine bear market. This was accepted in exchange for stronger total return performance, lower fees, broader diversification, and the Morningstar Gold rating.

Why VYMI was chosen over SCHY — the data-driven decision

SCHY was initially selected for its quality screen and shallower drawdown (-24% vs VYMI's -40%). After reviewing actual performance data across multiple time frames, VYMI was confirmed as the stronger choice: it outperformed SCHY by 9.93 percentage points over 1 year, 6.04 percentage points per year over 3 years, and 4.44 percentage points per year over 5 years — all with dividends reinvested — while charging a lower expense ratio (0.07% vs 0.14%). The yield is essentially identical (~3.41%). VYMI's 1,600+ holdings also provide meaningfully broader diversification than SCHY's 100-stock concentrated approach.

The accepted tradeoff: VYMI's deeper historical max drawdown (−40% vs −24%) means it falls harder in a genuine bear market. This is a real, named risk — accepted deliberately in exchange for stronger total return, lower fees, and Morningstar's highest conviction Gold rating as of April 2026.

What to monitor going forward

Annual expense ratio — confirm it hasn't drifted from the 0.05% / 0.07% figures used in this dashboard.
1099-DIV (the tax form your brokerage sends each January summarizing dividends paid) — check the foreign tax paid box to confirm the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) is actually being claimed each tax season.
VYMI's quarterly distribution amount — note that distributions fluctuate with currency movements and index rebalancing, so watch the multi-year trend rather than reacting to any single quarter's payout.

Decision history

A running log of brokerage allocation decisions and the reasoning behind them

June 2026 · Initial allocation decision

VXUS 50% / VYMI 50% — international diversification + high-yield dividend income

🌍Asset-class separation from the Roth

The Roth IRA holds 100% US equity (FXAIX, FSMAX, AVUV, SCHD) plus a bond sleeve. The brokerage holds 100% non-US-core assets — no fund family or asset class is duplicated between the two accounts.

💰Foreign tax credit captured

VXUS in a taxable account allows the foreign tax credit to be claimed directly — a benefit that would be permanently lost if held inside the Roth instead.

🛡️Durability over yield-maximizing alternatives

Covered-call funds (JEPI/JEPQ) and REITs were considered and rejected — both are taxed largely as ordinary income, working directly against the tax-efficiency goal. Preferred stock ETFs were also rejected after research showed they capture more downside than upside relative to equities (66.57% of S&P downside vs only 50.27% of upside for PFF), making them a poor durability holding despite the income appeal.

📊VYMI chosen over SCHY — performance data confirmed the decision

SCHY was initially considered for its quality screen and shallower drawdown (-24% vs -40%). After reviewing actual return data, VYMI outperformed SCHY by 9.93 percentage points (1-year), 6.04 percentage points/year (3-year), and 4.44 percentage points/year (5-year), all with dividends reinvested. VYMI also charges half the expense ratio (0.07% vs 0.14%) and holds Morningstar's highest Gold rating as of April 2026. The deeper drawdown risk was accepted deliberately in exchange for the stronger performance and cost advantage.

🚫VTI dropped from brokerage entirely

US broad-market growth exposure is now fully owned by FXAIX + FSMAX in the Roth — holding VTI in brokerage too would have duplicated that asset class across accounts for no added benefit at current balance size.

Status: executed. Initial fund selection finalized after full research process across this conversation.

June 22, 2026 · Account opened & funded

Brokerage account live — $1,000 initial deposit, VXUS 50% / VYMI 50%

Account opened at Fidelity

Individual taxable brokerage account opened. Core position set to SPAXX (money market fund, ~3.3% yield on idle cash) rather than the default FCASH (1.82%). SpecID (Specific Identification) selected as cost basis method before first purchase — this cannot be applied retroactively and is critical for future tax-loss harvesting.

💵$1,000 initial deposit — split 50/50

$500 into VXUS (international broad market, captures foreign tax credit) and $500 into VYMI (international high dividend, Morningstar Gold, 0.07% expense ratio). Full $2,863/mo contribution begins once car loan is paid off.

Next step: Decide DRIP vs. cash dividends before the first dividend distribution hits. DRIP is recommended during the accumulation phase — review again around age 43–44 when switching to cash income becomes relevant for the FIRE bridge.
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