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Author Topic: What is the current tax status of crypto-currency in the USA?  (Read 641 times)
Pipdips (OP)
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June 24, 2019, 03:48:27 PM
Merited by o_e_l_e_o (1)
 #1

Is crypto-currency actually taxable in the USA?

It is confusing for me to figure the tax issue out. If a person buys Bitcoin and then sends it all around the place, uses it for trading on multiple exchanges, makes thousands of trades, then buys coins like BNB for trading more, then sends portions of coins to wallets and back and forth.

How can that be traced? Even with block chain ledger, it seems impossible to trace that much activity.
How many people are washing their coins to make them untraceable?
How can the IRS determine and verify who owns coins?

Are they going to tax people who lose money from crypto-currency?

Does anybody else think it is confusing?
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June 24, 2019, 06:06:23 PM
 #2

Supposedly with the new tax laws in effect for 2018, in the US you have to report any sale of a cryptocurrency or any trade from one crypto to another.

This is very cumbersome if you do a lot of trading but not so bad if you just do a few transactions every year.

As far as what the IRS can track, I doubt that they can track much of anything at this point unless you are using US exchanges such as Coinbase.

Coinbase apparently reports to the IRS any customers that have yearly transactions totaling $20,000 or more.
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June 24, 2019, 07:07:45 PM
 #3

Supposedly with the new tax laws in effect for 2018, in the US you have to report any sale of a cryptocurrency or any trade from one crypto to another.

This is very cumbersome if you do a lot of trading but not so bad if you just do a few transactions every year.

As far as what the IRS can track, I doubt that they can track much of anything at this point unless you are using US exchanges such as Coinbase.

Coinbase apparently reports to the IRS any customers that have yearly transactions totaling $20,000 or more.

Cumbersome is an understatement! The Bitcoin ecosystem was designed so that it can not be traced for tax purposes, and at the very least not with any clarity. The movement and exchanging of funds, pairs, and proof of ownership is entirely too cryptic. On the same token I really want to report taxes and honor all tax codes.

For my purposes my account is way below $20,000 in value. Does that $20,000 limit only include purchases of fresh coins? Or is that for purchases and then any sales or converting back and forth to fiat? The tax operations of cyrpto-currency is just so vague and confusing. To have the IRS come in and ask for taxes from crypto seems wrong.
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June 25, 2019, 09:18:37 AM
 #4

As mentioned above, every trade is a taxable event, even if that trade is between two cryptocurrencies and never touches fiat.

How can that be traced? Even with block chain ledger, it seems impossible to trace that much activity.
It's very difficult, especially if you are making multiple trades on multiple exchanges, but the expectation from the IRS is that you track it all and report it all

How can the IRS determine and verify who owns coins?
A combination of people completing KYC or otherwise linking addresses to their real life identity, blockchain analytics, and exchanges reporting to the IRS.

Are they going to tax people who lose money from crypto-currency?
You can use your losses in crypto to offset taxes you pay elsewhere.

For my purposes my account is way below $20,000 in value.
Coinbase handing over the details of everyone with assets above $20,000 is only temporary. This cut off was what the IRS won in court, and it included 13,000 users, but they were pushing for the details of half a million users, and will continue to push. Assume if you have completed KYC on any major exchange (US based or not), the government will sooner or later know all your trades on that exchange.
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June 28, 2019, 05:46:25 AM
 #5

Is crypto-currency actually taxable in the USA?

It is confusing for me to figure the tax issue out. If a person buys Bitcoin and then sends it all around the place, uses it for trading on multiple exchanges, makes thousands of trades, then buys coins like BNB for trading more, then sends portions of coins to wallets and back and forth.

How can that be traced? Even with block chain ledger, it seems impossible to trace that much activity.
How many people are washing their coins to make them untraceable?
How can the IRS determine and verify who owns coins?

Are they going to tax people who lose money from crypto-currency?

Does anybody else think it is confusing?
Haven’t you heard that the decentralized system of cryptocurrency does not permit it to be traced and this is why some government is still having issues with it till date and in particular United State. There is no way some of these funds that has passed through cryptocurrency, especially bitcoin can really be traced, and this is what makes it become not taxable.

The only way government can tax cryptocurrency users is to impose tax on them which will be more on industries that have openly declared to be using blockchain in their operation, so they might just weigh the worth of the company and slam any charge they feel dim feet for such company on a monthly basis or on a yearly bases.
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July 01, 2019, 11:48:27 AM
Last edit: July 01, 2019, 02:53:42 PM by FanEagle
 #6

The idea is to let people report it themselves instead of actually tracking it. Coinbase or any other USA based place will notify the government and IRS for your transactions but if you remove your money from there and do whatever you want and return back the most knowledge IRS will have is you put in some money to coinbase, then something happened they don't know and you have either less or more money back into your coinbase for cashing out, which means they will ask you what happened in between for this change to happen.

Aside from that they are not tracking it, they are getting reports from both people themselves who do not want to seen as tax evaders and from coinbase like places to notify them of your movement, which means they do not go out and try to find you, they are asking you to go find them instead, makes things easier. You may want to not pay taxes at all and find loopholes but then if you get reported by some person then you will face harsher punishments.

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July 02, 2019, 04:53:05 AM
 #7

I can’t even imagine how to track a person who has a cryptocurrency. If, of course, the person himself came and said all his data or trades large sums, then this may attract attention in transactions from his wallet. But people who trade not large amounts of cryptocurrency are not worth tracking.
The only way government can track the usage of cryptocurrency down is to use the IP address or track it by the website people visit from an IP location that has to do with cryptocurrency, but even at this, there is little to which they can still do, because tracking the transaction itself is absolutely impossible, because everything that goes through the crypto technology is highly encrypted which makes it a decentralized system, except those coins that are centralized coins which can still be tracked, and I see that this may be the reason why the government of united state may back Facebook cryptocurrency up if they are to final agree to regulate and adopt cryptocurrency in the future. The highest they can do for those who would insist to continue with decentralized coin, is just to impose fixed taxes on them.
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July 02, 2019, 06:00:43 AM
 #8

Quote
Are they going to tax people who lose money from crypto-currency?

No country in the world has taxes on capital loss.That would be insane.Paying taxes,when you are losing money.WTF? Grin
I'm pretty sure that cryptocurrencies in the USA are a subject to capital gains tax and income taxes.
The US tax legislation is so damn complex. Angry

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July 02, 2019, 06:28:14 AM
 #9

Look at it from a different perspective. If you manage to hide most of your transactions and you are a successful traders, would you be able to explain to the tax authorities, where your income are coming from, if they do a life style audit on you?

People think they can hide things from the IRS, but at one stage your income from trading has to be spend and then your start leaving a paper trail and that normally leads to your downfall. <Buying assets, leave traces of spending habits>

Why risk going to jail for tax evasion, if you can simply pay the damn taxes and enjoy the proceeds of your labor?

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July 02, 2019, 07:03:13 AM
 #10

The only way government can track the usage of cryptocurrency down is to use the IP address or track it by the website people visit from an IP location that has to do with cryptocurrency
That's not true. If you have performed KYC procedures on any reputable exchange, chances are that exchange is currently, or will in the future, hand(ing) over details of your deposits, trades, and withdrawals to your national government. This doesn't just mean that all your activity on that exchange is being logged, but also your deposit and withdrawal addresses are being linked to your real identity too, which allows some blockchain analytics to be performed and link other addresses and coins to you.

because tracking the transaction itself is absolutely impossible, because everything that goes through the crypto technology is highly encrypted which makes it a decentralized system
This doesn't make sense. It doesn't matter that bitcoin is decentralized, or your wallet is encrypted. The ledger is public. As soon as they have linked an address to your identity, then can absolutely track what happens to your coins.
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July 02, 2019, 03:29:25 PM
 #11

Bitcoin is not private. At All.
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July 02, 2019, 03:59:52 PM
 #12

The important factor is intent.  If you are investigated by the IRS and it is clear you made honest mistakes and tried your best to pay taxes you won't be punished.  If you go and try to hide your source of income and partake in money laundering then they will hit you hard.
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July 03, 2019, 12:05:54 PM
 #13

I think they are not taxing the trades of bitcoin but more like sells of bitcoin like its a product which is horrible and caused many people a lot of pain. I have seen a guy who had as much as 400k at one point in bitcoin and taxed accordingly in dollar value and then the 2018 bear happened so he paid tons of taxes on money he didn't have and he wasn't even sure how he would be capable of paying it, he was literally considering bankruptcy just to get rid of it.

So, the system is still horrible unfortunately and whoever has done this taxing system for bitcoin has no idea of what bitcoin is, for example it should have been the profit you make from selling not just having since you can have a million dollars worth but it could worth 300k in a month whereas if you actually buy and then sell for higher that is real profit you should be taxed for.

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July 03, 2019, 01:24:05 PM
 #14

Is crypto-currency actually taxable in the USA?

It is confusing for me to figure the tax issue out. If a person buys Bitcoin and then sends it all around the place, uses it for trading on multiple exchanges, makes thousands of trades, then buys coins like BNB for trading more, then sends portions of coins to wallets and back and forth.

How can that be traced? Even with block chain ledger, it seems impossible to trace that much activity.
How many people are washing their coins to make them untraceable?
How can the IRS determine and verify who owns coins?

Are they going to tax people who lose money from crypto-currency?

Does anybody else think it is confusing?
Remember when you are doing any activity in the centralized exchange site and as a US civilian and you must do verification with your identity. IRS used the data that collected from the exchange site that followed all of the IRS guidance or become compliance with US regulation.
This article explains more about the status of taxation in the US https://bitcoinist.com/bitcoin-tax-irs-new-crypto-tax-guidelines/

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July 03, 2019, 05:21:58 PM
 #15

If you live in America, surely you will feel how their government sees everything with business. Yes, maybe we know that this country is a liberal country where people are free to do anything in legal terms. Maybe America will never look at bitcoin like what Japan did, they will continue to monitor the entry and exit of bitcoin through exchanges like Bittrex in America. All people originating in America will be supervised and required to pay taxes every time they receive and send bitcoins.
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July 04, 2019, 01:44:00 AM
 #16

The IRS published a memo in 2014 indicating how crypto is taxed: https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-14-21.pdf

Once you give up your KYC on an exchange, you need to be careful about what goes in and out of that account. The key is wallet/transaction clustering. Once you move coins to a service with your KYC on file, the deposited coins can be analyzed to identify (with a certain degree of accuracy) your wallets and other third party services where you hold coins. Those third parties could be subpoenaed later to further reveal your transactions.

Here's a simple example. If you send 1 BTC to Coinbase from an output holding 10 BTC, there is now strong blockchain evidence that you own the other 9 BTC. The IRS doesn't know that off the bat but if they ever look into you and your Coinbase account, it'll be obvious.

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July 04, 2019, 02:34:50 AM
 #17

Haven’t you heard that the decentralized system of cryptocurrency does not permit it to be traced and this is why some government is still having issues with it till date and in particular United State. There is no way some of these funds that has passed through cryptocurrency, especially bitcoin can really be traced, and this is what makes it become not taxable.

The US is actually doing really well (bad for users though) in tracking crypto activity and taxing them. They're even employing the services of firms like Chainanalysis to make sure they get their due. The only way you can really escape them is by not touching KYC exchanges, which is starting to become more difficult by the day.

The only way government can tax cryptocurrency users is to impose tax on them which will be more on industries that have openly declared to be using blockchain in their operation, so they might just weigh the worth of the company and slam any charge they feel dim feet for such company on a monthly basis or on a yearly bases.

They don't decide what the tax bill is. Crypto is taxed in the US like property, so the tax rate is corresponds to pre-existing laws.

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July 04, 2019, 05:54:39 AM
 #18

The only way government can track the usage of cryptocurrency down is to use the IP address or track it by the website people visit from an IP location that has to do with cryptocurrency
That's not true. If you have performed KYC procedures on any reputable exchange, chances are that exchange is currently, or will in the future, hand(ing) over details of your deposits, trades, and withdrawals to your national government. This doesn't just mean that all your activity on that exchange is being logged, but also your deposit and withdrawal addresses are being linked to your real identity too, which allows some blockchain analytics to be performed and link other addresses and coins to you.

because tracking the transaction itself is absolutely impossible, because everything that goes through the crypto technology is highly encrypted which makes it a decentralized system
This doesn't make sense. It doesn't matter that bitcoin is decentralized, or your wallet is encrypted. The ledger is public. As soon as they have linked an address to your identity, then can absolutely track what happens to your coins.
This is one part of centralized exchange that is very dangerous and may be used against us in the future, imagine that an exchange is planning to start afresh in a country like USA, and USA being stubborn to approve, they could just use the data they have accumulated so far from U.S citizens to lure government into approving them by showing them how the system can be transparent to them.

I do not understand why people keep embracing centralized exchange when the purpose of cryptocurrency is to remain anonymous with our transaction, while it is done peer to peer without the interference of third party. I think we need to start having this enthusiasm for DEX exchanges, which is the only exchange that can completely guarantee us of privacy.
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July 04, 2019, 06:32:07 AM
 #19

I think we need to start having this enthusiasm for DEX exchanges, which is the only exchange that can completely guarantee us of privacy.
A properly set up decentralized exchange with no KYC procedures (like Bisq, for example) is far superior to a centralized exchange (such as Coinbase) in protecting your privacy, but it's not a complete guarantee depending on the methods of payment you use. Face-to-face trades or cash deposits can be devoid of any personal details, and therefore truly private. Other payment methods such as bank transfers, Western Union/MoneyGram/etc., still require you to register an account linked to your real identity, and that information has to be transferred to the other party you are trading with. You are trusting the exchange not to record your details, and you are also trusting the other person not to leak your details to the government.

Whilst these scenarios may be unlikely, they are not impossible, and so your anonymity is not guaranteed.
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July 04, 2019, 04:43:51 PM
 #20

You may think that decentralized ones are far superior and better to avoid taxes and give your information to wrong hands (lets be honest there has been multiple instances of your info stolen from government happened in just past decade).

However, people do not feel the same way and willing to risk their security for the comfort and ease of use. With coinbase which is a shady company dealing your information to others and giving it to government as well and basically allows you to be watched by everyone for every move you do is still better than most decentralized ones when it comes to actually cashing out your money to dollars. Its both easy and also fast for it and there is still no better way. Decentralized ones still require a ton of work on cashing out process plus volume still sucks compared to others.

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