IRS will tax cryptocoins as property, not currency

The United States’ tax agency, the Internal Revenue Service, clarified its position on cryptocurrencies Tuesday in a statement. The full text is below.

The biggest takeaway is that the IRS plans to tax digital currencies as property, which means that:

 

anyone paid in digital currencies as a freelancer/ contractor will need to report this on Form 1099; profits and losses from the sale of such currencies will be subject to capital gains tax (at least if they’re used as capital assets); wages paid in cryptocurrencies must be reported.

 

Income tax for most Americans must be filed by April 15, so the timing is a bit inconvenient for those who have already filed.

 

No precedent: IRS court settlement doesn't clarify crypto staking taxes   Feb. 8, 2022
Crypto tax ‘a top enforcement priority,’ reminds IRS Commissioner   Sept. 28, 2021
Congresspeople Call on IRS to Take It Easy on Taxing Staking Rewards   Aug. 4, 2020
Avoid State Taxes on Crypto With US Supreme Court’s Recent Trust Decision?   July 6, 2019
Bitcoin-friendly Cash App integrates TaxBit amid tax-filing season   Feb. 28, 2023