Navigating the Tax Implications of International Cryptocurrency Transactions

Navigating the Tax Implications of International Cryptocurrency Transactions

August 13, 2024 0 By Ellice Whyte

Navigating the complex crypto tax landscape involves understanding which events constitute taxable events and reporting them accurately, while different activities like mining, staking or lending may carry their own tax consequences.

Exchanging one cryptocurrency for another counts as a sale and your gain or loss can be calculated as the difference between its fair market value and your cost basis.

International Transactions

When individuals use cryptocurrency to make purchases in foreign countries, the IRS deems this a taxable event and taxes any gains on sale at the same rate as if the property were being sold off directly – much like investing in stocks through a brokerage account.

Cryptocurrency traders must also consider tax implications when moving cryptocurrency between exchanges in different countries. Maintaining accurate records of purchases and sales are crucial in order to accurately calculate any capital gains or losses, with most exchanges offering free exports of trading data for customers.

Other taxable events include receiving new cryptocurrencies through airdrops or hard forks; this should be reported as income according to its fair market value at the time of receipt. Furthermore, providing special tax treatment for cryptocurrency would lead to significant revenue loss as taxpayers move assets and transactions into these currencies in order to evade regular taxes – it’s therefore crucial that tax professionals understand all ramifications associated with crypto taxes to minimize clients’ liabilities.

Taxes on Capital Gains

Cryptocurrency may be digital money, but the IRS considers cryptocurrency assets to be property; as a result, purchases and sales transactions of cryptocurrency assets must be reported just like stock market investors are obliged to report all aspects of their equity investments.

When using cryptocurrency to pay for goods or services, receive it as payment for business transactions, or mine crypto coins, you incur a capital gain when its value exceeds its cost basis. Whether this profit is short- or long-term will determine your tax liability.

The crypto industry has attempted to sidestep established tax regulations and protect its profits by arguing they should be exempt from certain reporting requirements. As a result, an increasingly large volume of customer gains go unreported and untaxed, leading to substantial Treasury losses. As a result, the IRS has intensified their scrutiny of cryptocurrency brokers in order to compel them to comply with their reporting obligations.

Taxes on Income

Cryptocurrency transactions are taxed events since the IRS considers digital assets property; investors must report purchases and sales just like stocks and real estate investments. This makes cryptocurrency trading far more complex than its stock counterpart, having profound ramifications on international investment strategies.

An instance of using cryptocurrency to purchase something triggers a sale and, if its fair market value has increased since you made your purchase, this counts as capital gain; conversely if its price drops since purchase date then this counts as capital loss.

As part of your tax filing requirements, it is also vital to keep careful records of your transaction history – particularly when moving cryptocurrency between wallets or accounts that you own. This is to prevent yourself from engaging in “wash sale” scams – selling assets at a loss before immediately purchasing similar ones to avoid taxes on realized gains. Logs will help provide proof that this was indeed how transactions transpired.

Taxes on Distributions

The IRS has recently decided that cryptocurrency holdings constitute property, meaning investment transactions (purchase and sales) must be reported just like stock market investments. Investors should report these events like any other corporate securities sale transaction.

To further complicate things, if you stake cryptocurrency native to a proof-of-stake blockchain and receive additional units as payment for validating it, these earnings must also be included as income under Section 61.

As cryptocurrency tax laws evolve slower than the technology that gives rise to them, it is imperative for taxpayers to keep a detailed log of their cryptocurrency transactions to help ensure compliance and reduce any potential tax liabilities. Blue J can assist with this aspect as well as all others of your cryptocurrency taxes – contact us now for more details!