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Example from [1], emphasis mine.

Suppose the stock market has a bad year. You sell a stock or mutual fund and realize a $20,000 loss with no capital gains that year. First, you'll use $3,000 of the loss to offset your ordinary income. The remaining $17,000 will carry over to the following year.

Next year, if you have $5,000 of capital gains, you can use $5,000 of your remaining $17,000 loss carryover to offset it. You can use another $3,000 to deduct against ordinary income, which would leave you with $9,000.

The remaining $9,000 will then carry forward to the next tax year. Assuming that you had no capital gains in the following three years, you could use up the remaining $9,000 loss, $3,000 at a time, over those three years.

[1] https://www.thebalance.com/can-a-capital-loss-carryover-to-t...

The $3000 stacks as an additional deduction from income. But if you had capital gains of $100k, that can totally be offset with a remaining balance of $900k. You can chew away your capital loss carryover with capital gains faster than 333 years.



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