What is taxable in the crypto world?
Capital gains and losses
Short-term gains refer to assets held for less than one year that are taxed at your ordinary income rate.
Long-term gains, which refer to assets held for over a year, are taxed at reduced rates of 0%, 15%, or 20%, depending on income.
Income events
Getting paid in crypto: Whether it’s for goods, services, or a job, if you’re paid in cryptocurrency, the value at the time you receive it is taxed as income.
Mining rewards: Any crypto earned from mining is taxable based on its value when you receive it. If you’re mining as a business, it could also be hit with self-employment taxes.
Staking rewards: Like mining, staking rewards are taxed as income based on their fair market value at that time.
Airdrops and hard forks: If you receive new tokens from an airdrop or a hard fork, the IRS considers them income once you can access them and taxes them accordingly.
DeFi interest or yield: Earnings from lending your crypto or participating in DeFi protocols (like earning yield or interest) are also taxable as ordinary income.
Referral bonuses and promos: Any incentives, such as referral rewards or “play-to-earn” campaigns, are taxable income when you receive the crypto. However, the specific tax treatment may vary depending on the nature of the reward and how it’s obtained within the game.
NFTs and collectibles
What’s new in 2025?
New Tax Form (1099-DA): Under Form 1099-DA, U.S. cryptocurrency exchanges must begin reporting user transactions, gross proceeds from crypto sales and trades using Form 1099-DA. Beginning Jan. 1, 2026, brokers must also report the cost basis of crypto transactions to help investors determine gains or losses.
Wallet-by-Wallet Accounting: Investors must now calculate the cost basis separately for each wallet. The cost basis is whatever you paid in U.S. dollars to acquire a token plus any associated fees.
Temporary Safe Harbor: Beginning January 1 through December 31, 2025, the IRS will allow “alternative identification” methods for digital assets—giving exchanges and taxpayers time to adapt to new digital asset identification requirements.
Penalties
Fines of up to $100,000 for individuals.
Up to 75% of unpaid tax as an additional penalty.
Accrued interest on unpaid amounts.
Criminal charges.
Up to five years in prison.
How to calculate and report your crypto taxes
Tracking tools and software
CoinLedger, ZenLedger, and CoinTracker: Integrate with TurboTax and H&R Block.
Koinly: Supports 23,000+ cryptocurrencies across 20+ countries.
TokenTax: Covers DeFi, NFT, and futures trading.
Blockpit (formerly Accointing): Supports 150+ exchanges and 60+ wallets.
CPAI: Uses AI to automate the crypto tax preparation process.
FIFO (first in, first out)
LIFO (last in, first out)
HIFO (highest in, first out)
Conclusion
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Source: https://decrypt.co/resources/us-crypto-taxes-in-2025-what-you-need-to-know