Crypto Taxes in 2026: Everything Investors Need to Know



Crypto taxes in the United States have entered a new phase in 2026. For years, filing relied more on investors tracking and reporting their own transactions with fewer enforced rules. That has now changed.

Notably, the 2026 tax filing season is the first one in which the government’s new reporting system is fully in place. This gives the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) much more visibility into crypto activity.

The basic tax filing treatment of crypto assets has not seen a drastic change in recent years. In March 2014, the IRS issued Notice 2014-21, which classified cryptocurrencies as property rather than currency. Since then, investors have been required to pay taxes when they sell crypto for cash, exchange one cryptocurrency for another, or use digital assets to pay for goods and services.

While that core rule remains the same, many other parts of crypto taxation have changed over the years. Reporting requirements are now broader, compliance rules have become stricter, recordkeeping is now more important, and enforcement efforts have increased. 

Investors who still follow reporting habits from the early years of the crypto market now face a very different tax environment.

As a result of these changes, understanding crypto tax rules is now extremely important for American traders. Essentially, investors need to know how gains and losses work, what activities trigger taxes, what reporting requirements apply, and what legal strategies can help reduce tax bills.

Major Crypto Tax Changes Investors Should Know in 2026

One of the most important crypto tax changes for 2026 is the rollout of Form 1099-DA. Starting with transactions made during the 2025 tax year and reported in 2026, covered U.S. digital asset brokers must provide transaction details to both investors and the IRS.

Most centralized cryptocurrency exchanges now fall under these requirements. Now, the IRS will receive information about crypto assets directly through Form 1099-DA instead of relying mainly on taxpayer disclosures. This gives tax authorities direct access to transaction data from regulated exchanges.

Another important change involves cost-basis tracking. Here, investors must track their cost basis separately for each exchange and wallet instead of combining holdings across different platforms.

For instance, someone who bought Bitcoin on both Coinbase and Robinhood can no longer combine these purchases into a single cost-basis calculation. Each platform must now be tracked separately.

This requirement comes from the IRS Revenue Procedure 2024-28. Beginning Jan. 1, 2025, investors must move away from universal cost-basis tracking and use a wallet-by-wallet approach instead. Under these rules, each wallet acts as its own separate cost-basis account.

Further, in 2026, tax rates also remain an important part of crypto tax planning. Notably, short-term capital gains are still taxed as ordinary income, with rates ranging from 10% to 37%.

Investors with higher incomes may also have to pay the additional 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax if their modified adjusted gross income exceeds $200,000 for single filers or $250,000 for married couples filing jointly.

Meanwhile, long-term capital gains continue to receive more favorable tax treatment. For 2026, single filers pay:

  • 0% on taxable income up to $49,450.
  • 15% on taxable income between $49,450 and $545,500.
  • 20% on taxable income above $545,500.

Although the long-term capital gains rates remain at 0%, 15%, and 20%, inflation adjustments have pushed the income thresholds slightly higher than they were in 2025.

How to Calculate Crypto Gains and Losses Correctly

Every taxable crypto transaction comes down to two important numbers: proceeds and cost basis. Your gain or loss is simply the difference between these two amounts.

Specifically, cost basis generally includes what you paid for the asset plus any eligible transaction fees. Meanwhile, proceeds represent the value you receive when you sell or dispose of the asset.

For instance, if you buy 1 Bitcoin (BTC) for a price of around $72,000 and later sell it for $120,000, your taxable gain is $48,000. Also, any transaction fees paid when purchasing the asset can be added to the cost basis, which lowers the amount of taxable gain.

Further, how long you hold an asset also affects how the system taxes you. 

In most cases, investors report income when they receive cryptocurrency and report capital gains or losses when they later sell, trade, or otherwise dispose of the crypto asset.

Holding an asset for more than 12 months allows investors to qualify for long-term capital gains rates instead of ordinary income tax rates. For larger positions, the difference can result in massive tax savings to the crypto investor.

Starting with tax year 2025, brokers issue Form 1099-DA showing the gross proceeds from crypto sales, and the IRS receives a copy of the same information. The IRS then compares what investors report on their tax returns with the information reported by exchanges through its Automated Underreporter system.

A common issue occurs when investors transfer cryptocurrency from one exchange to another. The receiving exchange often does not know the original purchase price of the asset. In some cases, it may report a cost basis of zero.

Without proper records, a sale can appear to be entirely profit, even if the investor originally paid a substantial amount for the asset.

As a result of this, investors have the responsibility of maintaining accurate cost-basis records and making sure the records match the information reported on Form 1099-DA.

Common Crypto Tax Mistakes That Can Cost Investors More

A lot of investors continue to make tax-reporting mistakes, and several errors seem to appear repeatedly across multiple reports.

One of the most common mistakes involved crypto-to-crypto trades. 

Notably, some investors believe that swapping Bitcoin for Ethereum or exchanging one cryptocurrency for another is not a taxable event. However, U.S. tax rules treat these transactions as disposals.

Each swap requires investors to calculate the cost basis of the asset they gave up and the fair market value of the asset they received at the time of the trade. 

Stablecoin transactions also cause confusion. 

Most investors assume that converting crypto into a stablecoin delays taxes until they later convert the stablecoin into U.S. dollars.

In reality, any gain becomes taxable at the moment the investor exchanges the original cryptocurrency for the stablecoin.

Cost-basis reporting errors can create problems as well.

Although Form 1099-DA reports transaction proceeds, forms issued for 2025 transactions do not include cost-basis information. As a result, investors must calculate that information themselves using the wallet-by-wallet tracking method required by the current IRS rules.

Large differences between tax software calculations, unusually large gains or losses, inconsistent accounting methods, and missing cost-basis information often come from reporting mistakes.

If investors fail to report their cost basis correctly, the IRS may assume a basis of zero, making the entire sale amount appear taxable. This increases the tax rate for the investor.

Another area of reporting challenge comes from DeFi transactions.

Many investors fail to report income earned through staking rewards, liquidity mining, yield farming, and similar decentralized finance (DeFi) activities. 

These rewards usually become taxable income at their fair market value when received, not when they are sold later.

Some investors assume that DeFi activity remains hidden because they do not receive traditional tax forms. However, blockchain analytics tools can track on-chain activity and connect transactions to exchange accounts that have completed Know Your Customer (KYC) verification.

Best Crypto Tax Strategies to Reduce Tax Liability Legally

Tax-loss harvesting remains one of the most useful tax strategies. It involves selling underperforming crypto assets at a loss to offset the capital gains you would receive from the assets performing well.

Unlike stocks, cryptocurrency is still not subject to wash-sale rules. For context, this rule is an IRS regulation that disallows a tax loss deduction if you sell an asset at a loss and buy the same or a substantially similar one within 30 days before or after the sale.

The fact that the IRS has not yet placed crypto under this rule means investors can sell their underperforming crypto assets at a loss and immediately buy the same asset again without losing the tax benefit from the loss.

This allows investors to lock in losses for tax purposes but maintain exposure to potential future price gains from the same asset, especially if they remain convinced that the asset will recover.

Tax-loss harvesting has multiple advantages. For one, realized losses can offset capital gains from cryptocurrency and other investments. 

If losses are greater than gains, investors can generally deduct up to $3,000 from ordinary income each year. Married taxpayers filing separately can generally deduct up to $1,500. Any unused capital losses usually carry forward to future tax years.

Meanwhile, investors should still pay attention to possible regulatory changes. Notably, lawmakers introduced several proposals during 2035 and 2025 that would have applied wash-sale rules to cryptocurrency. As of press time, Congress has not approved these rules, but future changes remain possible.

Another effective way to reduce taxes is to hold your crypto investment for a longer duration. Keeping an asset for more than 12 months changes the tax treatment from ordinary income rates, which can be as high as 37%, to long-term capital gains rates of 0%, 15%, or 20%, depending on income.

On a $100,000 gain, the difference from long-term holding can save investors more than $17,000 in taxes.

Meanwhile, accounting methods can also affect tax outcomes. Investors can generally choose from:

  • FIFO (First In, First Out)
  • HIFO (Highest In, First Out)
  • Specific Identification 

For context, these are methods used to determine which assets are sold for tax purposes. Each method can produce different gain and loss results depending on the makeup of a portfolio.

Specifically, FIFO assumes the earliest purchased assets are sold first, which can lead to higher taxable gains if older purchases were cheaper. Meanwhile, HIFO assumes the most expensive assets are sold first. This typically reduces taxable gains by maximizing the cost basis.

Specific Identification allows the investor to choose exactly which units to sell. This gives the taxpayer the most control and flexibility to manage gains and losses. However, it demands detailed record-keeping to track each asset individually.

Whatever method investors choose, they should apply it consistently across wallets and tax years.

What Happens If You Don’t Report Crypto Taxes?

Failing to report cryptocurrency activity carries much greater risk today than it did just a few years ago.

If the IRS determines that a taxpayer acted negligently or significantly understated their tax liability, it can impose penalties equal to 20% of the unpaid tax amount. Cases involving intentional wrongdoing can lead to even steeper consequences. Civil fraud penalties can reach 75% of the unpaid tax.

Reporting violations related to foreign financial accounts can also be costly. Non-willful FBAR violations may result in penalties of up to $10,000 per year. Meanwhile, willful violations can lead to much larger penalties.

In more serious cases, repeated failures to comply or deliberate attempts to avoid taxes may lead to criminal investigations. 

When determining whether a taxpayer acted willfully, federal authorities look at whether the individual knowingly ignored a legal obligation.

Some common warning signs include:

  • False statements
  • Nominee accounts
  • Unreported offshore exchange activity
  • Hidden wallets
  • Altered records
  • Repeated non-compliance after previous warnings

During 2025, reports indicated that thousands of crypto investors received enforcement letters from the IRS. The agency sends these notices to taxpayers it believes may have underreported income, avoided taxes, or failed to pay what they owe.

Receiving one of these letters requires action. Ignoring it could eventually result in an audit. For taxpayers worried about possible criminal exposure, the IRS recently updated Form 14457 as part of its Voluntary Disclosure Practice.

The updated form now includes a section for virtual currency. This allows eligible taxpayers to come forward and report previously undisclosed crypto activity. In many cases, individuals who fully disclose their activities and pay outstanding taxes, interest, and penalties can avoid criminal prosecution.

What Counts as Taxable Crypto Activity in 2026?

The IRS generally treats every disposal of a digital asset as a potentially taxable event. However, not every crypto-related activity creates a tax obligation.

Taxable activities include:

  • Selling cryptocurrency for fiat currency 
  • Trading one cryptocurrency for another 
  • Spending cryptocurrency on goods or services 
  • Earning yield farming income
  • Receiving airdropped tokens 
  • Receiving liquidity mining rewards
  • Accepting cryptocurrency as payments for services or work
  • Receiving block mining rewards
  • Earning DeFi-related returns
  • Receiving staking rewards

There is no minimum reporting threshold. Even a transaction involving only $10 worth of cryptocurrency or NFTs must be reported. 

Meanwhile, some crypto activities remain non-taxable. These involve:

  • Buying cryptocurrency with U.S. dollars
  • Holding cryptocurrency
  • Moving crypto between wallets that you personally own

However, transfer fees paid in cryptocurrency can still create taxable disposals. 

Also, it is important to note that gifts receive favorable treatment in many situations. For 2025 and 2026, the annual gift tax exclusion is $19,000 per recipient. 

People who receive gifts within this timeframe generally do not owe taxes when they receive them. However, donors may need to file Form 709 if their gifts exceed certain limits.

Buying, Selling, and Swapping Crypto: When Taxes Apply

Buying cryptocurrency with U.S. dollars establishes the asset’s cost basis and starts the holding period. The purchase itself is not taxable.

Taxes generally come into the picture when the investor disposes of the asset. 

Specifically, selling cryptocurrency for cash creates a capital gain or loss based on the difference between the sale price and the original cost basis. Also, trading one cryptocurrency for another receives the same tax treatment.

This rule applies whether the trade takes place on a centralized exchange (CEX), a decentralized exchange (DEX), or directly through a blockchain protocol.

Meanwhile, gas fees also complicate the situation. When investors pay gas fees using ETH or the native token of any underlying blockchain, they are effectively disposing of the asset. As a result, the gas fee payment may create a separate capital gain or loss.

Most tax professionals recommend tracking gas fees separately and adding them to basis calculations when appropriate. Because of this, a single crypto swap can create two separate tax calculations: one for the asset being exchanged and another for the token used to pay the gas fee.

NFT transactions generally follow the same rules. Notably, selling or trading an NFT counts as a disposal and may result in either short-term or long-term capital gains, depending on how long the investor held the NFT. 

Further, using cryptocurrency to buy an NFT also creates a taxable disposal of the cryptocurrency the investor used in the purchase.

Taxes on Staking, Mining, Airdrops, and DeFi Earnings

The IRS generally treats staking rewards as ordinary income when investors receive them. In this case, the amount of taxable income equals the fair market value of the reward on the date the investor received it.

Mining rewards also get the same tax treatment. The American tax agency also considers airdropped tokens as ordinary income when investors receive them.

This principle applies to DeFi earnings, including yield farming rewards, liquidity mining rewards, and lending income. These earnings become taxable based on their fair market value at the time of receipt.

In most cases, these activities create two separate tax events. First, investors owe capital gains tax, or claim a capital loss, when they later sell those assets. 

For instance, if an investor receives staking rewards worth $3,000 and the tokens later rise in value and are sold for $4,000, the investor must first report $3,000 as ordinary income when they receive the rewards. Later, when they sell the tokens, the investor must report a $1,000 capital gain.

Most individuals report crypto-related income on Schedule 1 of Form 1040. Self-employed individuals whose crypto activities qualify as a business generally report the income on Schedule C.

If mining activities qualify as a trade or business, taxpayers may also deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses through Schedule C.

Notably, IRS Notice 2024-57 introduced another important issue for crypto investors. With this, a lot of DeFi transactions currently fall outside broker reporting requirements. 

However, that does not mean those transactions are tax-free. Investors still have the responsibility of tracking and reporting all taxable DeFi activity, even if they do not receive Form 1099-DA. Not receiving a reporting form does not remove the obligation to report income.

FAQ Section

Do I Pay Taxes If I Only Hold Crypto?

Just holding cryptocurrency does not create a taxable event even if the asset increases in value.

Investors generally recognize gains or losses when they sell, trade, or otherwise dispose of the asset.

However, if an investor earns staking rewards, lending income, airdrops, or similar crypto income while holding assets, the income from these rewards must be reported when received, even if the investor has not sold the underlying cryptocurrency.

Are Crypto Losses Tax-Deductible?

Yes.

Realized crypto losses can offset capital gains on a dollar-for-dollar basis.

If losses are greater than gains, investors generally deduct up to $3,000 per year against ordinary income and carry forward any remaining losses into future tax years.

As cryptocurrency is not currently subject to wash-sale rules in the U.S., investors can sell an asset at a loss and immediately buy it back without losing the deduction.

Is Moving Crypto Between Wallets Taxable?

No.

Transferring cryptocurrency between wallets that belong to the same person does not create a taxable event.

However, using self-custody wallets such as MetaMask does not remove a taxpayer’s responsibilities. Blockchain transactions remain publicly visible, and taxpayers must still report any taxable activity from those wallets.

While transferring assets between your own wallets is not taxable, transfer fees paid in cryptocurrency can still generate taxable gains or losses because they involve disposing of the asset you used as the gas or transfer fee.

How Much Crypto Income Must Be Reported?

All taxable crypto income must be reported.

There is no minimum threshold.

Whether the income comes from trading, staking rewards, mining, airdrops, or other crypto-related activities, taxpayers must report it regardless of the amount involved.

The IRS Form 1040 includes a digital asset question asking taxpayers whether they received, sold, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of digital assets during the year. Providing an incorrect answer can lead to additional penalties.

Can Tax Authorities Track Decentralized Wallets?

In many cases, they can.

The IRS continues to expand its ability to monitor blockchain activity.

Notably, the agency works with companies such as Chainalysis to analyze blockchain data, identify possible tax evasion, and uncover unreported crypto income.

As most blockchains remain public, authorities can often connect wallet activity to specific individuals. While networks like Monero, Zcash, and Dash can make transaction tracking difficult, the tax agency could leverage on/off-ramp tracing.

Although self-custody wallets such as MetaMask do not issue Forms 1099, the IRS can still trace transactions through partnerships with companies including Chainalysis and Palantir.

These tools help authorities identify wallet owners, follow transfers across different blockchains, and connect spending activity to real-world identities. 

Any cryptocurrency that passes through a KYC-verified exchange can potentially be linked back to the person who owns it, even if that interaction happened years earlier.

As a result, complete anonymity in cryptocurrency is much less common than many investors assume.

DisClamier: This content is informational and should not be considered financial advice. The views expressed in this article may include the author’s personal opinions and do not reflect The Crypto Basic opinion. Readers are encouraged to do thorough research before making any investment decisions. The Crypto Basic is not responsible for any financial losses.





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