TJ · Taxable Brokerage · June 2026
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
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.
Annual tax cost by balance size
| Balance | Annual dividends | Tax at 15% | After-tax income |
|---|
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.
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.
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
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
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)
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.
What to monitor going forward
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.
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.
Growth trajectory
Adjust to model different contribution and return scenarios
Tax drag trend by balance size
Annual tax owed on dividends as the account grows, at your 15% qualified-dividend rate