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Crypto Tax Guide 2026: What You Owe and How to Report It

Complete 2026 crypto tax guide. Understand capital gains rates, how staking rewards are taxed, NFT tax rules, and how to minimize your crypto tax bill legally.

10 min read

The IRS Treats Crypto as Property

The IRS position (Notice 2014-21, confirmed repeatedly) is that cryptocurrency is property, not currency. This has major implications:

  • Every sale, trade, or exchange of crypto is a taxable event
  • Buying crypto with USD is not taxable — you just establish a cost basis
  • Paying for goods/services with crypto is taxable (you're "selling" the crypto)
  • Crypto-to-crypto trades are taxable at the moment of exchange

2026 Capital Gains Tax Rates

Short-term (held ≤12 months): Taxed as ordinary income

Income (Single) Rate
Up to $11,925 10%
$11,926–$48,475 12%
$48,476–$103,350 22%
$103,351–$197,300 24%
$197,301–$250,525 32%
Over $250,525 35–37%

Long-term (held >12 months): Preferential rates

Income (Single) Rate
Up to $48,350 0%
$48,351–$533,400 15%
Over $533,400 20%

High earners also pay 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) on long-term gains above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (MFJ).


What Triggers a Taxable Event

Action Taxable?
Buy crypto with USD ❌ No
Sell crypto for USD ✅ Yes
Trade BTC for ETH ✅ Yes
Pay for goods with crypto ✅ Yes
Receive crypto as payment ✅ Yes (ordinary income)
Receive staking rewards ✅ Yes (ordinary income when received)
Receive mining rewards ✅ Yes (ordinary income)
Receive airdrop ✅ Yes (ordinary income when received)
NFT sale ✅ Yes
Transfer between your own wallets ❌ No
Gift crypto (under $18,000) ❌ No (for giver)

Calculating Cost Basis

Your taxable gain = Selling Price − Cost Basis

Cost basis methods (must choose one and be consistent):

  • FIFO (First In, First Out): Oldest coins sold first — IRS default
  • HIFO (Highest In, First Out): Highest-cost coins sold first — minimizes gains
  • Specific Identification: Pick exact coins — requires proper record-keeping

Example: You bought 1 BTC at $30,000 in 2023 and 1 BTC at $60,000 in 2024. You sell 1 BTC today at $80,000.

  • FIFO: Gain = $80,000 − $30,000 = $50,000
  • HIFO: Gain = $80,000 − $60,000 = $20,000

HIFO can save thousands — but you must have proper records for each transaction.


Staking and DeFi Tax Treatment

The IRS confirmed in Revenue Ruling 2023-14 that staking rewards are ordinary income when received, valued at fair market value at time of receipt.

DeFi specifics:

  • Adding liquidity to a pool: receiving LP tokens is generally not taxable
  • Removing liquidity: may trigger gain/loss on LP tokens
  • Yield from lending protocols: ordinary income
  • Wrapped tokens (e.g., WBTC): typically not taxable if 1:1 conversion

Tax-Loss Harvesting: The Crypto Advantage

Unlike stocks, crypto is not subject to the wash-sale rule (as of 2026). This means you can:

  1. Sell crypto at a loss
  2. Immediately rebuy the same crypto
  3. Claim the capital loss to offset gains (up to $3,000/year against ordinary income)

Example: You have $15,000 in BTC gains (long-term, 15% rate = $2,250 tax). You also hold ETH with $12,000 unrealized loss. Harvest the ETH loss: net taxable gain = $3,000, tax = $450. Saved $1,800.

Congress has proposed closing this loophole — take advantage while it remains available.


How to Report Crypto to the IRS

  • Form 8949: Report each transaction (sale, trade, etc.)
  • Schedule D: Summary of all capital gains/losses
  • Schedule 1 Line 8z: Staking rewards, mining income, airdrops
  • FBAR / Form 8938: If you hold crypto on foreign exchanges exceeding thresholds

IRS Form 1040 now has a front-page question: "At any time during 2025, did you receive, sell, exchange, or otherwise dispose of any digital asset?" A "Yes" answer with no supporting forms is a red flag.

Use our Crypto Tax Calculator to estimate your liability.