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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
tax-deferred
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ If you have federal friends who are in the tax-deferred Thrift Savings Plan, dangle this column under various noses.
▪ In a tax-deferred annuity, your money grows much faster than in a taxable account.
▪ In fact, because of the way income and estate taxes work, many experts caution about overuse of tax-deferred vehicles.
▪ Most market professionals agree that the tax-deferred funds are a major force behind the exponential growth in stock prices.
▪ Once the money is gone, it can never be replaced on a tax-deferred basis.
▪ The act did not abolish DISCs but limited their tax benefits and imposed an interest charge to tax-deferred earnings.
▪ Think of any matching contribution from the employer as a tax-deferred raise.
▪ You may learn about tax-deferred annuities, other retirement plans, dollar-cost averaging and so on.
Wiktionary
tax-deferred

a. Having tax due only until a later time; having the rax duty deferred.

Usage examples of "tax-deferred".

The advertisements had played up this fact dramatically, touting the winnings as “tax-free” in the large print and counting on the “fine print” to inform the public that the amounts were actually tax-deferred and only for one year.