1. A normal account is just that, normal. You can buy whatever securities you want and it gets taxed on capital gains (20%-ish in Japan). NISA is, as you probably know, a tax-free account with a yearly maximum of 1.2M for regular NISA and 400k for Tsumitate NISA. The securities you can purchase with them are limited (especially with Tsumitate NISA, its all mutual funds). Do note that people here also refers to normal account as specific/designated which means that your securities company (Rakuten/SBI/Monex) are the ones who withhold the 20% cap gains tax for you. A true normal account means you have to file taxes yourself (I don't recommend this from a hassle perspective)thejunman wrote: ↑Wed Aug 04, 2021 1:29 am I'm completely new to investing so I have a few (very basic) questions before I decide which broker and which type of NISA account I want to sign up with:
What is the difference between a "normal trading account" and a NISA account?
I keep reading that after the 5 or 20 years tax-free period is over there is an option to move it into a normal trading account but I'm not completely sure what one is.
Also, is it possible to transfer between an ordinary NISA account and a Tsumitate NISA account?
I'm planning on starting off with a Tsumitate NISA account and then transfering to an ordinary NISA account in the future as I'd like to choose my own stocks and ETFs. I realise I cannot hold both at the same time but is this still the case if they are with with different brokers ie one with Rakuten and another with SBI?
2. So what the 5 year (NISA) and 20 year (T-NISA) periods mean is that after that period, whatever the value of your securities are, they are not taxed on capital gains if you sell (so you have a 20% advantage on them). If you don't sell and move the securities to a normal/designated account, it converts your acquisition cost to be whatever that value is as if you just bought it. For example, you buy stock A at 200 yen in a NISA account, after 5 years, its value is 300. You have a gain of 100 yen tax free instead of the 80 you would get in a designated account.
Now if you transfer this to a designated account after the 5 year and then wait another year and it goes up to 350, your capital gains for tax purposes is only 50 yen since your designated account considers your acquisition cost to be 300.
3. I don't see why its not possible to do a TNISA->NISA transfer but I don't think anyone here has attempted to do so.
4. NISA accounts are managed by the government so you can't have more than one no matter how many securities accounts you own.