In most cases, yes. If you sold, traded, or spent crypto, you
will have a capital gain or loss that needs to be reported on your tax return. You also
need to report income from staking, airdrop, interest, nodes, mining, etc.
If you sold, traded, or spent crypto, then you have capital
gains and losses that need to be reported, regardless of whether you cashed out or not.
Yes. As of right now, crypto is a self-reported asset, and you
need to calculate and report your own income and gains and losses, regardless of whether
you received a 1099 or not. If you need help with this, feel free to reach out!
In general, your crypto income will either be classified as
ordinary income or capital gains. Your tax rates are determined based on your total
income and filing status, but ordinary income and short-term capital gains can be taxed
up 37% and long-term capital gains can be taxed up to 20%. If you are a resident of a
state that assesses income tax, you may also have to pay state tax on top of the federal
tax.
If the IRS audits you and discovers that you have not reported
your crypto activity on your tax return, you will be required to pay the tax at that
point, as well as penalties and interest. In more serious cases, if the IRS determines
that you were purposefully evading taxes on your crypto, you can face serious fines and
even jail time.
First off, know that you aren’t alone. The majority of our new
clients need to catch up on multiple years when they start working with us, so we have
navigated this many times. The best thing to do is to start by reconciling your
transactions so we can determine what your income and gain/loss was for each previous
year. Then if needed, we can help amend your previous tax returns.
No, your crypto activity will be reported on Form 1040, which is
your normal individual income tax return. If you need help filing your tax return, let
us know!
Crypto activity is reported on Form 1040, which is your normal
income tax return. Tax returns are due on April 15; however, if you need more time you
can file an extension, which gives you six more months to file your tax return and
extends the filing deadline to October 15. (Please note that these dates may change
slightly if the deadlines fall on a weekend or holiday.)
If you aren’t able to file your taxes by April 15, the best
thing you can do is to file an extension. This will give you until October 15 to file
your taxes; however, it does not give you an extension on your tax payments. This means
that if you owe taxes for the current tax year, you still need to make a payment (or at
least an estimated payment) by April 15, or you will be subject to interest and the
late-payment penalty. If you end up overpaying with your estimate you will receive a
refund when you eventually file your tax return. It is important to file an extension
whether or not you are making an estimated payment though, because filing an extension
will make sure you are not subject to the late-filing penalty (which is 10x more than
the late-payment penalty). If you need help filing an extension, let us know!
The IRS states that you should recognize crypto as income when
you have “dominion and control over the cryptocurrency so that you can transfer, sell,
exchange, or otherwise dispose of the cryptocurrency.” This means that you may have
income to report regardless of whether you have cashed out.
As of right now the wash sale rule does not apply to crypto.
Tax loss harvesting is an easy way to save money on your taxes
by selling off any coins you are holding at a loss towards the end of the year to offset
any gains you may have.
Yes, we have helped countless numbers of clients in this exact
situation. During the reconciliation step of the process we are often able to fill in
many of the holes in your data by looking through the blockchain, recreating data based
on coin values, and matching up unmatched deposits and withdrawals. If you’re feeling
overwhelmed by your crypto taxes, let us know and we can help you clean it up!
Every cloud has a silver lining and the silver lining here is
called capital losses. You can carry any capital losses you have booked from previous
years indefinitely into the future. This means less taxes for you down the road.
However, without a crypto report you won’t be able to claim them!
Yes, you will still want to report your losses to reduce your
audit risk. You can also use your crypto losses to offset capital gains from other
investments such as stocks, mutual funds, real estate, gold, etc. If you have a total
net loss across all investments, you can deduct $3,000 per year against your total
income, and roll the rest of the loss forward to future years.
The most important thing you can do to reduce your tax bill is
to first produce an accurate crypto tax report. This provides a solid foundation for any
tax-reducing strategy. One of the most effective tax-reducing strategies is called “tax
loss harvesting”. This is where you sell coins you are holding at a loss towards the end
of the year in order to offset any gains you may have. We can provide reports to help
you do this and also discuss other tax-saving strategies with you!
Yes you may still owe taxes if you converted one coin to another
coin. For instance selling BTC to buy ETH. Any sale of crypto is a taxable event!
The cost basis from coins you bought in previous years is
carried over to future years. This means that previous year’s data may greatly affect
future year’s data. Thus, it is important that we have an accurate report for all years
that you were involved in crypto. This usually doesn’t mean a bigger bill for you. In
fact, it usually means your final bill will be less when we can access your complete
transaction history and assign a cost basis to all of your coins.
Though the majority of our clients are individuals, we are able
to handle your business taxes as well. We can help anyone with an LLC, S-Corp, or
Partnership. At this time, we do not handle filing for C-Corps, trusts, or non-profits.
Yes, you can pay for any of our services with crypto!
The most important thing you can do to reduce your tax bill is
to first produce an accurate crypto tax report. This provides a solid foundation for any
tax-reducing strategy. One of the most effective tax-reducing strategies is called “tax
loss harvesting”. This is where you sell coins you are holding at a loss towards the end
of the year in order to offset any gains you may have. We can provide reports to help
you do this and also discuss other tax-saving strategies with you!
Potentially. We have seen many, many inaccurate crypto reports
prepared over the years, so we would need to look over the previous years to confirm
that they were done correctly. If you have a Cointracking or Koinly account with your
transactions in it already, we can start from there! Sometimes starting from scratch can
be the most cost-effective approach though.