Kansas Crypto Legislation

This month, the Kansas Legislative Division of Post Audit, a “non-partisan audit arm of the Kansas Legislature, released a very good background report on cryptocurrency and tax issues – Reviewing Issues Related to State Cryptocurrency Tax Policies. The Division’s website also has a link to a 16-mimnute audio file that is about the best I have heard on the basics of cryptocurrency tech and tax. I recommend it if you feel you are missing the basics on these topics.

Appendix B is a helpful glossary of terms such as airdrop, blockchain, hard fork and staking.

A few interesting items from the report:

  • 16% of people in the US have invested in or used cryptocurrency (per Pew Research Center).
  • When there is not third party reporting (such as a 1099), only 45% of taxpayers accurately report their income. I have heard this before. Per the IRS (page 14), for income subject to substantial information reporting and withholding, there is only about 1% underreporting. In contrast, for income subject to little or no information reporting and no withholding, compliance is only about 55% (45% non-compliance).So if you wonder why IRC §6045 on broker reporting was expanded by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (PL 117-58, 11/15/21) to include virtual currency sales by exchanges (and perhaps by others), that the underreporting of transactions without third party reporting, is the key reason.
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