New IRS Requirement: All Taxpayers Must Answer This Question

New IRS Requirement: All Taxpayers Must Answer This Question

For federal tax purposes, digital assets are treated as property. General tax principles applicable to property transactions apply to transactions using digital assets. You may be required to report your digital asset activity on your tax return.

Definition of Digital Assets
Digital assets are broadly defined as any digital representation of value which is recorded on a cryptographically secured distributed ledger or any similar technology as specified by the Secretary.

Digital Assets Include (but are not limited to):

Convertible virtual currency and cryptocurrency
Stablecoins
Non-fungible tokens (NFTs)
Digital assets are not real currency (also known as “fiat”) because they are not the coin and paper money of the United States or a foreign country and are not digitally issued by a government’s central bank.

A digital asset that has an equivalent value in real currency, or acts as a substitute for real currency, has been referred to as convertible virtual currency.

A cryptocurrency is an example of a convertible virtual currency that can be used as payment for goods and services, digitally traded between users, and exchanged for or into real currencies or digital assets.

Tax Consequences

Transactions involving a digital asset are generally required to be reported on a tax return.

Taxable gain or loss may result from transactions including, but not limited to:

Sale of a digital asset for fiat
Exchange of a digital asset for property, goods, or services
Exchange or trade of one digital asset for another digital asset
Receipt of a digital asset as payment for goods or services
Receipt of a new digital asset as a result of a hard fork
Receipt of a new digital asset as a result of mining or staking activities
Receipt of a digital asset as a result of an airdrop
Any other disposition of a financial interest in a digital asset
Receipt or transfer of a digital asset for free (without providing any consideration) that does not qualify as a bona fide gift
Transferring a digital asset as a bona fide gift if the donor exceeds the annual gift exclusion amount
Guidance and Publications
For more information regarding the general tax principles that apply to digital assets, you can also refer to the following materials:

IRS Guidance
IRS Notice 2014-21 guides individuals and businesses on the tax treatment of transactions using convertible virtual currencies. For federal tax purposes, virtual currency is treated as property. General tax principles applicable to property transactions apply to transactions using virtual currency.
Frequently Asked Questions on Virtual Currency Transactions expand upon the examples provided in Notice 2014-21 and apply those same longstanding tax principles to additional situations.
Revenue Ruling 2019-24PDF addresses the tax implications of a hard fork.
Additional Information
Chief Counsel Advice (CCA) 202035011PDF – Describes the tax consequences of receiving convertible virtual currency as payment for performing microtasks through a crowdsourcing platform.
Chief Counsel Advice (CCA) 202114020PDF – Addresses the receipt of Bitcoin Cash as a result of the hard fork.
Chief Counsel Advice (CCA) 202124008PDF – Describes the applicability of Internal Revenue Code Section 1031 to exchanges of Bitcoin for Ether, Bitcoin for Litecoin, and Ether for Litecoin.
Chief Counsel Advice (CCA) 202302011PDF – Addresses the applicability of IRC section 165 to cryptocurrency that has declined in value.
Chief Counsel Advice (CCA) 202302012PDF – Addresses the qualified appraisal requirement for charitable contributions of cryptocurrency.
Private Letter Ruling 202019028PDF – Addressed certain issues related to the tax-exempt status of entities in the digital asset industry.
FinCEN Notice 2020-2PDF – provides guidance on Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) reporting requirements related to virtual currency.
Publications
Taxable and Nontaxable Income, Publication 525 – for more information on miscellaneous income from exchanges involving property or services.
Charitable Contributions, Publication 526 – for more information on charitable contribution deductions.
Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets, Publication 544 – for more information about capital assets and the character of gain or loss.
Basis of Assets, Publication 551 – for more information on the computation of basis.
Determining the Value of Donated Property, Publication 561 – for more information on the appraisal of donated property worth more than $5,000.

IRS

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1 comment on “New IRS Requirement: All Taxpayers Must Answer This Question”

  • Change title to: How does IRS view and tax digital assets? OR change article to: At any time during tax year, did you receive, sell, send, exchange, or otherwise acquire any financial interest WITHOUT USING REAL CURRENCY (i.e., CASH) in any virtual currency?

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