# Пов'язані статті щодо Crypto Tax

Центр новин HTX надає останні статті та поглиблений аналіз на тему "Crypto Tax", що охоплює ринкові тренди, оновлення проєктів, технологічні розробки та регуляторну політику в криптоіндустрії.

South Korea's Crypto Tax Countdown Begins: Escalating Three-Way Game Between CEXs, Retail Investors, and Regulators

South Korea's National Tax Service has initiated final preparations to implement a virtual asset tax starting January 2027, with reporting for comprehensive income tax due by May 2028. The tax applies a 22% rate on annual profits exceeding 2.5 million KRW from transfers and leasing, affecting an estimated 13.26 million people. To enforce this, authorities plan to collect data from major domestic exchanges like Upbit and Bithumb and launch a comprehensive virtual asset analysis system. This move follows two previous postponements and signifies a shift towards institutionalized management. The plan also involves international data sharing under the OECD's CARF framework from next year to curb capital flight. However, tensions exist between regulators and exchanges over data sharing and new anti-money laundering rules. The industry, represented by DAXA, opposes proposed regulations requiring the reporting of all cross-border transfers over $6,800 as suspicious, arguing it renders AI risk systems useless and creates an impractical administrative burden. Given Korea's market—comprising 30% of global volume with 85% in altcoins and dominated by retail speculation—the tax could reduce short-term speculative trading and stabilize the domestic market by limiting capital outflows. Its implementation may also influence global crypto regulatory and taxation models, serving as a significant case study for other jurisdictions.

marsbit05/08 14:32

South Korea's Crypto Tax Countdown Begins: Escalating Three-Way Game Between CEXs, Retail Investors, and Regulators

marsbit05/08 14:32

U.S. Tax Collection Reaches Wallet Exchanges from 6 Years Ago? Four-Layer Breakdown of the IRS's New Form

The U.S. IRS has introduced a new audit form requiring taxpayers to disclose all digital asset platforms, wallets, and services used, including exchanges like Coinbase, Binance, and defunct entities like FTX, as well as self-custody wallets such as MetaMask and Ledger. This form, part of a broader tax enforcement strategy, mandates detailed account information and transaction history, with penalties for false declarations under perjury laws. This move is not sudden but results from years of regulatory evolution, starting with the 2017 John Doe subpoena to Coinbase, which compelled the exchange to share user data. The 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act further classified crypto exchanges as "brokers," requiring them to report user data via Form 1099-DA starting in 2025. The IRS employs a four-layer data approach: exchange reports, traditional financial records, blockchain analysis, and audit questionnaires. While centralized exchanges remain key data sources due to KYC requirements, the focus may shift to on-chain protocols like Hyperliquid, where transactions are transparent but identity linkage is weaker. The IRS typically audits up to three years prior, extendable to six for significant underreporting. High-risk groups include those who reported minimal crypto activity despite acknowledging it, discrepancies in 1099-DA forms, and high-frequency traders during the 2017-2021 bull market. Tax professionals advise consulting experts before responding to audits. Globally, tax authorities like the UK's HMRC and Australia's ATO are also tightening crypto tax reporting, signaling a broader regulatory trend.

Odaily星球日报03/16 02:52

U.S. Tax Collection Reaches Wallet Exchanges from 6 Years Ago? Four-Layer Breakdown of the IRS's New Form

Odaily星球日报03/16 02:52

Is Crypto Trading Taxation Becoming a Reality? An In-Depth Analysis of the 2026 Global Crypto Tax Regulations

"Tax on Crypto Trading Becomes Reality? In-Depth Analysis of 2026 Global Crypto Tax Regulations" Hong Kong recently announced a consultation to implement the OECD's Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) and revised Common Reporting Standard (CRS). The goal is to automatically exchange tax-related information on crypto asset transactions with partner jurisdictions starting in 2028, with revised CRS rules taking effect in 2029. Furthermore, from January 1, 2026, the UK and over 40 other countries will begin enforcing new tax rules, requiring local crypto service providers to collect user wallet and transaction data for future international tax information exchange. For example, UK-based exchanges must collect detailed records of all customer transactions. HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) will use this data to cross-check tax returns for compliance, with sanctions for violations. This data may also be used for identity verification, anti-money laundering, and criminal investigations, significantly impacting the anonymity and compliance landscape of the crypto industry. CARF is an international standard developed by the OECD under G20 mandate to enhance tax transparency for crypto assets. It aims to collect standardized information on often opaque, cross-border crypto transactions and automatically exchange it annually with the tax authorities in the user's jurisdiction of tax residence. The framework covers a broad range of crypto assets, including stablecoins, crypto-derived financial instruments, and some NFTs. Reporting obligations fall on intermediaries like exchanges that facilitate conversions between crypto and fiat or between different crypto assets. CARF complements the existing CRS, which primarily targets traditional financial accounts. While CRS is mature for traditional finance, it struggled to cover crypto transactions occurring outside the banking system. CARF addresses this gap by targeting the native crypto market. The OECD has also revised CRS to include new products like CBDCs and close loopholes involving indirect crypto exposure through derivatives. As of early December 2025, 76 jurisdictions have committed to adopting CARF. The UK and EU are pioneers, starting data collection in 2026 and the first exchange in 2027. Singapore, the UAE, and Hong Kong follow with collection in 2027 and full implementation in 2028. Mainland China is not on the initial list of exchanging jurisdictions. Its strong regulatory stance against virtual asset businesses means there is currently no licensed domestic exchange system to be incorporated into CARF. Hong Kong's adoption does not automatically mean data will be shared with mainland authorities; such exchange depends on China's decision to participate and establish bilateral agreements. However, not being part of CARF does not mean immunity. Tax information could still be shared through existing tax treaties, case-by-case requests, or joint investigations. For individuals and institutions, the key takeaway is that as major jurisdictions systematically collect crypto transaction data, compliance and traceability will become the norm, especially for activities relying on centralized exchanges and fiat gateways.

marsbit01/13 06:47

Is Crypto Trading Taxation Becoming a Reality? An In-Depth Analysis of the 2026 Global Crypto Tax Regulations

marsbit01/13 06:47

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