Published March 27, 2026 · CoinTaxReporting

Crypto Taxes for Beginners – Everything US Investors Need to Know in 2026

I get it — the first time you sell crypto and realize you might owe taxes on it, the reaction is usually "wait, really?" Yes, really. But here's the thing: once you understand the basic rules, it's not that complicated. Let me walk you through it.

The Golden Rule: Crypto Is Property

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The IRS decided back in 2014 (Notice 2014-21) that cryptocurrency is property, not currency. What does that mean for you? Every time you sell or exchange crypto, you potentially trigger a capital gains tax event — just like selling stocks or real estate. That's the foundation everything else builds on.

What Is a Taxable Event?

You owe taxes when you:

The one that surprises most beginners? Trading BTC for ETH. That's two transactions in the IRS's eyes. You sold BTC (taxable), then bought ETH (new cost basis).

Not taxable: Buying crypto with dollars, transferring between your own wallets, HODLing (no sale = no tax).

Short-Term vs. Long-Term Capital Gains

This is the single most important concept in crypto taxes. Hold for over a year and your tax rate drops dramatically.

Held ForTax RateExample
Under 1 year10–37% (ordinary income rates)Bought Jan, sold Oct
Over 1 year0%, 15%, or 20%Bought Jan 2025, sold Feb 2026

Hold for 13 months instead of 11 and you could cut your tax rate in half. That's a real strategy worth knowing.

How to Calculate Your Gain or Loss

Capital Gain = Sale Price − Cost Basis (what you paid)

You bought 1 ETH for $2,000 and sold it for $3,500. Your gain is $1,500. Simple.

Where it gets complicated: if you bought multiple times at different prices, the IRS uses FIFO (first in, first out) by default. Or you can use Specific Identification if you keep proper records — this lets you pick which coins to sell to minimize your tax hit.

What Forms Do I Need?

Do I Have to Report Even Small Amounts?

Yes. No joke — there's no "de minimis" exemption for crypto in the US. Even a $5 gain from buying coffee with Bitcoin is technically reportable. In practice, the IRS focuses on larger discrepancies, but the obligation is there. Use tax-loss harvesting to offset gains where you can.

Step-by-Step: Your First Crypto Tax Filing

  1. Export transaction history from all exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken, etc.)
  2. Export wallet-transfers-steuer">wallet transaction history (MetaMask, Ledger)
  3. Import into crypto tax software to calculate gains automatically
  4. Review the generated Form 8949
  5. Enter totals into TurboTax, H&R Block, or give to your accountant

Common Beginner Mistakes

Related Resources

Crypto Tax SoftwareCrypto Tax BlogHow to Report Crypto on TaxesCrypto Capital Gains Tax USForm 1099-DA Explained

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. For individual tax advice, consult a licensed tax professional.