IRS Sets New Crypto Reporting Rules

Hannah Bietz
irs sets new crypto reporting rules
irs sets new crypto reporting rules

Starting with the 2025 tax year, U.S. taxpayers who buy, sell, or trade digital assets will face new federal reporting rules that could reshape how they track gains and losses. The Internal Revenue Service is moving to standardize reporting for crypto transactions, a shift meant to close tax gaps and reduce errors ahead of the 2026 filing season.

The change centers on broker reporting and investor disclosure. It will affect exchanges, some wallet providers, payment platforms that handle digital assets, and their customers. The update follows years of debate on how to apply tax law to crypto and comes as trading volumes and retail participation have grown.

“A new IRS requirement covering crypto transactions starting with the 2025 tax year has big consequences for how investors report digital assets transactions.”

Why The IRS Is Acting Now

Lawmakers directed the IRS to tighten digital asset reporting in 2021 through bipartisan infrastructure legislation. Since then, Treasury and the IRS have issued proposals and guidance to define “brokers,” set format standards, and address cost basis rules. The goal is to make crypto reporting resemble stock and bond reporting, where firms send standardized forms to customers and the IRS.

Officials say missing information and inconsistent records have created a large compliance gap. Many taxpayers rely on spreadsheets and exchange exports to compute gains, which often do not align across platforms. The agency expects standardized forms to reduce mismatches and audits.

What Will Change For Investors

The shift places more responsibility on platforms to report customer activity, while investors will need to reconcile records across wallets and exchanges. Forms are expected to include gross proceeds and cost basis details, helping taxpayers compute gains and losses more easily.

  • Investors should expect new information returns for 2025 transactions, delivered in early 2026.
  • Transfers between platforms may trigger “transfer statements” to carry over cost basis.
  • Taxpayers will still need to report self-custodied activity that is not covered by a broker.
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Tax professionals say standardized forms may reduce guesswork for many filers. But they warn that complex scenarios, such as DeFi transactions, wrapped tokens, and staking rewards, can still require manual review.

Who Is Covered—And Who Is Not

The rules focus on entities that act as intermediaries in digital asset sales. Centralized exchanges and some hosted wallet providers fall within scope. Industry groups have pressed for clarity on decentralized protocols, arguing that software developers and validators do not fit a broker role.

Early guidance suggests a phased approach, with certain entities brought into reporting first, and others addressed later. Self-custody remains the taxpayer’s responsibility. Stablecoins and NFTs are treated as digital assets for tax purposes, but detailed reporting mechanics may differ by asset type and platform function.

Industry Reaction And Concerns

Exchanges have welcomed clearer rules but caution that implementation will be complex. They point to data gaps when users move coins between chains or to self-custody, making cost basis tracking difficult. Privacy advocates warn that broad data collection could expose customer information if safeguards fall short.

Tax advisers urge the IRS to refine definitions and timelines to avoid reporting errors. They also recommend safe harbors while systems mature, to prevent penalties for mistakes outside a firm’s control.

Preparation And Next Steps

Platforms will need to build or upgrade reporting systems over 2024 and 2025. That includes customer identity checks, transaction tagging, transfer statements, and secure delivery of forms. Investors should organize records now to avoid surprises when forms arrive in 2026.

Experts suggest a few steps:

  • Consolidate transaction history from every exchange and wallet used in 2024 and 2025.
  • Track cost basis and holding periods for each token and address.
  • Document transfers between platforms with dates, amounts, and wallet addresses.
  • Review staking, lending, and DeFi activity for potential income recognition.
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What To Watch

Further guidance is expected on how decentralized services will be treated and how cross-chain transactions will be reported. The IRS may issue clarifications on basis reporting for wrapped assets and liquidity pool positions. Industry participants are also watching how penalties will apply during the first year and whether relief will be offered.

The 2025 start date marks a shift toward stock-like reporting for crypto. If the rollout goes smoothly, filers could see fewer errors and audits. If gaps persist, taxpayers and platforms may face disputes over mismatched data.

For now, investors should treat 2024 as a catch-up year. Clear records and consistent cost basis tracking will be the best defense when the new forms arrive. The coming tax season will be a preview, but the real test begins with 2025 transactions.

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Hannah is a news contributor to SelfEmployed. She writes on current events, trending topics, and tips for our entrepreneurial audience.