What to Expect When the IRS Alters Its Bitcoin Tax Policy
Coming guidance from the IRS is expected to clarify longstanding crypto tax questions. Here's what to look for. · CoinDesk

The Takeaway

  • Coming guidance from the IRS will address longstanding questions about the tax treatment of cryptocurrency.

  • The tax collector has identified several specific issues it will discuss, including whether investors owe taxes on free crypto they get from a fork.

  • The industry is also hoping for clarity on a number of other matters, including the tax implications of airdrops, staking and crypto stored at overseas exchanges.


Every tax season, cryptocurrency investors in the U.S. struggle to figure out how much they owe the government. But next April it might be a little bit easier.

Last month, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) said it would “soon” issue new guidance on the tax treatment of crypto, something it hasn’t done since an initial notice the agency issued in 2014.

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In its original guidance, the IRS stated that for tax purposes, virtual currency is treated as property and not as currency. But it left a number of key questions unanswered, such as how to value cryptocurrency received as income.

The market has become more complicated in the intervening years, with the emergence of phenomena like airdrops and forks that essentially give people free crypto, raising new questions about tax liability.

In a letter last month to Rep. Tom Emmer, IRS Commissioner Charles P. Rettig said the forthcoming guidance would address these issues and others. He did not say exactly when it will come out, and neither would the IRS when contacted by CoinDesk.

It’s hard to predict when the IRS will publish the new guidance, but as the extended due date for individual returns is October 15, and for pass-through businesses it is September 15, “they may shoot to have guidance out before those extended deadlines,” said Kirk Phillips, a certified public accountant (CPA).

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Below, we explain the major areas where the crypto community is looking for more clarity from the taxman.

How much did you make?

One of the most important questions since the publication of the IRS’ first notice has been how taxpayers should determine the fair market value of cryptocurrency they receive as income (in exchange for goods and services, for instance). This is its cost basis.

The 2014 guidance says that if a cryptocurrency is listed on an exchange, the fair market value is determined by converting it into U.S. dollars “at the exchange rate, in a reasonable manner that is consistently applied.”

However, unlike securities or property, cryptocurrencies can vary in price widely between different exchanges, said Phillips, the author of “The Ultimate Bitcoin Business Guide.”