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Author Topic: Dollar-Cost Averaging Bitcoin & Taxes  (Read 79 times)
NatureMoves (OP)
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April 20, 2021, 07:53:44 PM
 #1

If I have 5 bitcoins and I acquired them using dollar cost averaging for the past 5 years, and I decide to sell them, how will I show the IRS which ones should be charged long term capital gains tax and short term capital gains tax? Is there a crypto tax software out there you guys recommend that will be able to distinguish between the two? I live in the US by the way.
TangentC
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April 20, 2021, 08:32:17 PM
 #2

If you were a Miner, you have to treat it all as income from a business.
But you also be able to deduct business expenses to offset that income.

As a trader you Treat the coin sale as a stock sale.

Normally FIFO, First IN First Out
But LIFO, Last In First Out is an option.

https://finance.zacks.com/determine-shares-sell-fifo-lifo-9766.html
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FIFO vs LIFO Stock Trades

The first-in, first-out method is the default way to decide which shares to sell. Under FIFO, if you sell shares of a company that you've bought on multiple occasions, you always sell your oldest shares first. FIFO stock trades results in the lower tax burden if you bought the older shares at a higher price than the newer shares. For example, if you bought a bunch of stock before a recession, and then bought additional shares when the recession bottomed out, you would minimize your tax burden by using the FIFO method.

The last-in, first-out method works in exactly the opposite manner: you sell your newest shares first. The LIFO method typically results in the lowest tax burden when stock prices have increased, because your newer shares had a higher cost and therefore, your taxable gains are less.

For example, say you bought 150 shares of Company A stock for $40 per share six years ago and another 150 shares of Company A stock for $50 per share four years ago. If you're selling 200 shares today for $65 per share and using the FIFO method, you sell 150 shares with a cost of $40 and 50 shares with a cost of $50. That gives you a taxable profit of $4,500. If, in the same scenario, you use the LIFO method, you sell 50 shares with a cost of $40 and 150 with a cost of $50. That gives you a taxable profit of only $3,500.

If you've held shares for more than a year, you'll pay the lower long-term capital gains on them. If you've held them for less than a year, you'll pay your ordinary income rate on any gains.
Tell Your Broker

If you plan to use any method besides FIFO, including LIFO, you must specifically direct your broker as to which shares to sell so that your taxes end up the way you want. According to Internal Revenue Service Publication 550, the burden is on you to prove that you informed your broker of which shares you wanted sold and that your broker followed your requests. If you can't prove that, you're treated as having sold your oldest shares first.
2018 Tax Law Changes

Under the tax law changes going into effect in 2018, ordinary income tax rates are generally lower while capital gains tax rates are only slightly changed.

That means that if you pick shares to sell that you've held for less than one year, you'll pay less additional tax than if you held on to them for more than a year.
2017 Tax Law

As of 2017, ordinary income tax rates are generally higher, meaning more of a difference between long and short term capital gains rates for many taxpayers.



DannyHamilton
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April 20, 2021, 08:46:38 PM
 #3

If I have 5 bitcoins and I acquired them using dollar cost averaging for the past 5 years, and I decide to sell them, how will I show the IRS which ones should be charged long term capital gains tax and short term capital gains tax? Is there a crypto tax software out there you guys recommend that will be able to distinguish between the two? I live in the US by the way.

You really should talk to a tax expert that is familiar with. your local jurisdiction.  Advice from random people on the internet that are not familiar with your specific situation or the tax rules in your specific location is likely to be pretty bad advice.
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