"Coins held for longer than one year are taxed at long-term capital gains rates of 0%, 15%, and 20%. Coins held for less than that amount of time can be taxed at short-term rates between 0% and 37%.
Moreover, those are maximum rates—what users actually pay depends on their tax bracket.
For instance, in 2021, single (aka unmarried and childless) filers pay 0% on the first $40,400 of taxable income (including the profit from the sale), 15% on amounts from $40,401 to $445,850, and 20% on the income and earnings beyond that. Those thresholds are higher for married people.
“The long-term capital gain rate has been extremely favorable,” Chandrasekera said. “We talk to these wealthy individuals, they never sell their stock positions of any type of asset without holding it for 12 months or more. So I encourage you to do the same. Just HODL.” "
https://decrypt.co/53625/one-big-reason-to-hodl-bitcoin-to-lower-taxesI cannot yet compare this with taxes on cryptocurrency in Russia, because there are still no clear recommendations for declaring and paying taxes on cryptocurrencies.
Personal income tax in Russia is from 9 to 35%, but it is possible to pay 4% as self-employed as long as the fiat exchange amount does not exceed 2,400,000 rubles ($ 32,360).