Congress Examines 8 Crypto Tax Proposals as $2T Market Faces Compliance Burden

CN
3 hours ago

Key Takeaways:

    • Lawmakers examined eight digital asset tax proposals covering payments, donations, mining, staking, and compliance.
    • Several proposals would reduce reporting requirements for routine digital asset transactions and stablecoin payments.
    • Other measures address staking rewards, charitable deductions, market safe harbors, and voluntary disclosure programs.
  • The House Ways and Means Committee, which writes tax legislation and oversees federal revenue policy, held a hearing last week on digital asset taxation. Chairman Jason Smith argued that current rules leave crypto users, businesses, miners, stakers, and investors facing unclear treatment across a market he described as exceeding $2 trillion.

    Cryptocurrency ownership has expanded sharply across the United States, according to Smith’s statement. He stated that more than 67 million Americans, or about one-quarter of the population, own cryptocurrency. He added that many holders work outside technology and finance, including construction, manufacturing, and food service.

    Chairman Smith said:

    “Today, cryptocurrency has a market capitalization of over $2 trillion. That’s a massive industry by any measure, and nearly all other industries of a similar size enjoy clear tax policies.”

    The committee reviewed eight digital asset tax proposals. Six were bills, including the Less Tax Paperwork for Digital Asset Owners Act, the Tax Clarity for Mining and Staking Act, the Charitable Deductions for Digital Asset Donations Act, the Providing Analogous Rules for Digital Assets Act, the Applying Existing Tax Anti-Abuse Rules to Digital Assets Act, and the Digital Assets Voluntary Disclosure Program Act. Two additional discussion drafts focused on territory-based capital gains tax avoidance and the tax treatment of mining, staking rewards, and charitable deductions.

    A bill from Representative Rudy Yakym would reduce reporting for network fees and small stablecoin fluctuations. The measure, called the Less Tax Paperwork for Digital Asset Owners Act, also would let frequent digital asset users provide one annual income calculation for certain assets.

    A separate bill from Representative Mike Carey, the Tax Clarity for Mining and Staking Act, would clarify mining and staking rewards as ordinary income. It also would allow miners and stakers to treat rewards as self-created property when that method better matches timing and character.

    Chairman Smith stressed:

    “Other countries, like Singapore and Switzerland, have already implemented comprehensive tax regimes that offer clarity to digital asset owners. Congress must act now and enact clear tax rules to ensure America remains the global leader in digital assets.”

    Another measure from Representative Mike Kelly, the Charitable Deductions for Digital Asset Donations Act, would remove qualified appraisal requirements for donations of widely traded digital assets. Legislation from Representative David Kustoff, the Providing Analogous Rules for Digital Assets Act, would extend safe harbors and accounting rules used in traditional financial markets.

    An anti-abuse proposal from Representative Jodey Arrington, the Applying Existing Tax Anti-Abuse Rules to Digital Assets Act, would extend those rules to digital assets. A bill from Representative Aaron Bean, the Digital Assets Voluntary Disclosure Program Act, would create a one-time program for taxpayers correcting past filings.

    The final two proposals are discussion drafts. One would target territory-based capital gains tax avoidance involving digital assets. Another, from Representative Steven Horsford, would address mining and staking rewards and charitable deduction issues.

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