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Author Topic: IRS taxing cryptocurrency trades starting Jan. 1st.  (Read 519 times)
MiningSensei
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December 31, 2017, 10:01:39 PM
 #21

Obviously that they will affect and follow the US residents, now the ones who are in another country. The IRS has their main sede (if not the only one) in there.

Which countries will follow this... And obviously some countries are working on regulations, maybe restrictions.

If you have enough balls you can easily avoid them ,but you all know that it is never good to try to avoid taxes, specially on the US in where the IRS is veryyy strict.

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taxes are voluntarily actually

Maybe avoiding taxes in there could make you being punished with jail for more than years.

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panghae
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December 31, 2017, 10:03:49 PM
 #22

Why the government always wants to regulate anything that are threats to their wrong doings?there wont be any freedom in U.S if this is really true.

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December 31, 2017, 10:17:53 PM
 #23

seems impossible and impractical to calculate tax like this.

better for them just to accept capital gains on crypto to fiat

roll on DEX's

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December 31, 2017, 10:20:31 PM
Last edit: January 01, 2018, 01:31:45 AM by Ix
 #24

Taxes were only required if you converted your Crypto to Fiat,

Not true. Crypto is not the first, or even the 10th "currency-like" commodity in the history of taxation. The rules on how to do this have been LONG ESTABLISHED. Just because you aren't familiar with them does not mean the sky is falling. The minor wording change also does nothing to affect this.

Quote
All exchanges between crypto to crypto were considered (or at least arguable) were a like of kind exchange so no taxes owed.

Also not true. First of all, as I mentioned, like-kind exchanges require filing specific tax forms that you have not likely been filing. So if you are going to claim it is a like-kind exchange, you need to be filing these forms. If you are day trading, the point is already moot and you are required to pay income tax on your gains, whether or not you cash them out to fiat. Like-kind exchange does not apply to day trading and is completely irrelevant.

Quote
So starting on Jan 1st, 2018 anyone that trades on a US Exchange will be required to pay taxes on each crypto to crypto trade
for the tax year 2018 which is due by april 2019.

This is again wrong. Changing currencies is a "taxable event". I explained what this means - it means you are due to pay capital gains if you realized any. If you are day trading, this is irrelevant as you owe income tax. You are not being taxed on each and every transaction - that is silly.

Quote
Does not matter if you are a US citizen or foreign citizen, if you trade on a US exchange you will owe the US Gov. Taxes on those trades.

No, you will not.

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Bittrex & Poloniex exchanges (Based in the U.S.A.) will most likely die within the year due to this tax change.

Nothing has changed.
Ix
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December 31, 2017, 10:26:20 PM
 #25

Because if this is true, does anyone here have advice/tips to avoid something like this happening with having year of claiming capital gains but then being able to carry losses and get taxes paid back?

Day trading (or whatever the actual window of time is, it's much longer than 1 day) is considered income and taxed at income tax rates. Filing them as capital gains will get you some hefty back tax fines.

I am not an accountant, but I believe the established rules are to maintain a daily log of your total assets, you do not need to record individual trades. A daily log of total assets is not difficult.

But if you are day trading, you need to file INCOME TAX GAINS, not capital gains, or you will be misfiling and will incur significant penalties.
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December 31, 2017, 10:40:49 PM
 #26

The IRS would like our feedback.

Quote
Therefore, the Treasury Department and the IRS request
comments from the public regarding other types or aspects of virtual currency
transactions that should be addressed in future guidance.
Comments should be addressed to:
2
Internal Revenue Service
Attn: CC:PA:LPD:PR (Notice 2014-21)
Room 5203
P.O. Box 7604
Ben Franklin Station
Washington, D.C. 20044
or hand delivered Monday through Friday between the hours of 8 A.M. and 4 P.M. to:
Courier’s Desk
Internal Revenue Service
Attn: CC:PA:LPD:PR (Notice 2014-21)
1111 Constitution Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20224
Alternatively, taxpayers may submit comments electronically via e-mail to the following
address: Notice.Comments@irscounsel.treas.gov. Taxpayers should include “Notice
2014-21” in the subject line. All comments submitted by the public will be available for
public inspection and copying in their entirety.

So starting on Jan 1st, 2018 anyone that trades on a US Exchange will be required to pay taxes on each crypto to crypto trade
for the tax year 2018 which is due by april 2019.
...
This will probably kill all US exchanges , as anyone with any sense will move to oversea exchanges that don't require this over reaching tax increase.

The exodus begins!?


penig
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December 31, 2017, 10:43:59 PM
 #27

I was told by accountant when doing these taxes that it doesnt matter what you exchanged bitcoin for whether its altcoin or usd etc.  So i guess its not confirmed for everyone since some ppl might interpret it a bit difference as like exchange.


What if you have btc and altcoins in your bittrex account still and then withdraw it to your wallet?  But dont do any trading on bittrex?  I assume thats nothing since thats a withdraw to your wallet right?  

That would seem the case.  Its analogous to holding a stock or bond, you can buy hold them with no tax on the "profit" from them rising until you sell them.  What the article is discussing is where people have traded one asset for another, seems to be a loop hole that these aren't taxed and they just tied up that hole.  My understanding is trading already needs to be declared and taxed, so this is probably only going to affect those that dont declare crypto trades as tax under the "property" classification.  Its not a change to tax on crypto trades, its a clarification.
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December 31, 2017, 10:46:41 PM
 #28

Very funny. And what happens when you actually lose money. Will the IRS give you your money back?
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December 31, 2017, 10:48:42 PM
 #29

Very funny. And what happens when you actually lose money. Will the IRS give you your money back?

You can credit your losses to a future tax return. These are all well established rules.
sp_skeptic
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January 02, 2018, 03:31:09 PM
 #30

I have argued previously that crypto to crypto trades are taxable and now it is law. However I think that this means that the IRS will probably not challenge like kind transactions for tax years prior to 2018. So now I plan to claim like kind for 2017 which will save me a lot. If you do this you must file IRS form 8824 though!
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January 02, 2018, 03:33:56 PM
 #31

With the new tax bill recently being passed, it is reported that we will be required to pay tax on all cryptocurrency to cryptocurrency trades.  Does anybody know how much tax we would have to pay on trades.  How do you even calculate that?

https://townhall.com/columnists/lindsaymarie/2017/12/29/brace-yourselves-cryptocurrency-investors-taxes-are-coming-n2428153

Governments world over will be looking for ways to tax cryptocurrencies because they are missing out on huge tax revenues, I'm skeptical as to how crypto to crypto would work. I would think the best way to tax would be similar to stocks where profits are only taxed when stocks are liquidated. I guess however that may not work for cryptos as they can be used as a means of payment.
penig
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January 02, 2018, 04:02:49 PM
 #32

With the new tax bill recently being passed, it is reported that we will be required to pay tax on all cryptocurrency to cryptocurrency trades.  Does anybody know how much tax we would have to pay on trades.  How do you even calculate that?

https://townhall.com/columnists/lindsaymarie/2017/12/29/brace-yourselves-cryptocurrency-investors-taxes-are-coming-n2428153

Governments world over will be looking for ways to tax cryptocurrencies because they are missing out on huge tax revenues, I'm skeptical as to how crypto to crypto would work. I would think the best way to tax would be similar to stocks where profits are only taxed when stocks are liquidated. I guess however that may not work for cryptos as they can be used as a means of payment.

Governments already have a way to tax crypto, using the same mechanisms as stocks.  The common understanding that stock profits are only calculated when liquidated appears to be misguided.  Apparently if you trade one stock for another (or one asset for another asset) that is also considered a taxable event and taxes due, with the amount based on market value at time of transaction.  Look at it this way, governments have had many decades to see and close loopholes with stock and asset trades, they just apply the same rules to bitcoin and no new regulation is required, just some statement that bitcoin is classified as an asset, which they have done across major jurisdictions.
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January 02, 2018, 04:21:26 PM
 #33

Condolence to US residents with the silliest law ever. Crypto tokens should not be taxed like this, because they don't really have any definite USD value, and many are not even traded against USD. It is when you actually exchange crypto token to USD, goods or services you know its USD value exactly, and at this moment it should be taxed. How IRS is going to audit day traders? This is just not possible technically.
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January 02, 2018, 04:43:16 PM
 #34

That's basically terrorism against cryptos, since your revenues in cryptos are already subject to be taxed, so it is not clear what this law would add to the status quo, beyond some additional harassment.

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January 02, 2018, 04:59:52 PM
 #35

Well the IRS would be US, so it should at least affect the US exchanges.

I would say that it affects only US citizens. I work with US exchanges but I am resident in a different jurisdiction, so IRS has no right to impose taxes on me at all. I hope that they also tax shares and funds.

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January 03, 2018, 07:39:36 AM
 #36

Sounds kind of ridiculous and is most likely going to ruin it for part of the americans.
It is going to ruin it one way but I am not sure how this would all end up. It is insane honestly, and I really do not envy the Americans right now. This is also why the whole idea of having decentralized exchanges would make a lot of sense, but this is something that we may not see for now and will just have to live with the attack on the crypto users and just unfortunate US is first.

I guess that this is a reason to start shifting away from US exchanges. No one knows for now but I am sure it is going to get integrated into the exchange fees somehow and until then, we may not know. It is crazy though as this would bring more like an era where trading fee may start being a huge one but let's see. Whichever way though, I am looking forward to how that is going to play out.
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January 03, 2018, 08:02:29 AM
 #37

All the more reason to hodl and not pay the steeper income tax rates and wait a year or more and just pay the long term capital gains tax. Which is also based off your normal income but shouldn't be that bad depending on what you already make.

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January 03, 2018, 08:06:40 AM
 #38

centralization in a decentralized platform?this is ridiculous the U.S citizens are good paying their taxes very well,i am against this regulation.

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January 03, 2018, 08:11:42 AM
 #39

With the new tax bill recently being passed, it is reported that we will be required to pay tax on all cryptocurrency to cryptocurrency trades.  Does anybody know how much tax we would have to pay on trades.  How do you even calculate that?

https://townhall.com/columnists/lindsaymarie/2017/12/29/brace-yourselves-cryptocurrency-investors-taxes-are-coming-n2428153
How does this stop you from trading cryptocurrencies on an offshore website instead of a main exchange that is based in the USA?

 
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January 03, 2018, 09:08:56 AM
 #40

felling bad for US residents with the silliest law ever. Crypto currencies should not be taxed like this, because they don't really have any definite USD value, and many are not even traded against USD. It is when you actually exchange crypto token to USD, goods or services you know its USD value exactly, and at this moment it should be taxed. How IRS is going to audit day traders?could ever it be possible technically?
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