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Bitcoin Government The Almighty Buck

IRS Sending Warning Letters To More Than 10,000 Cryptocurrency Holders (wsj.com) 171

The Internal Revenue Service has begun sending letters to more than 10,000 cryptocurrency holders, warning about penalties for failing to report income and pay tax on transactions involving virtual currencies. From a report: The agency expects its mailing to be completed by the end of August [Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; alternative source]. It is sending three variations of one letter, depending on the information it has about the recipient. "Taxpayers should take these letters very seriously. The IRS is expanding efforts involving virtual currency, including increased use of data analytics," said IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig. An IRS spokesman declined to say whether the letters stem from information turned over by digital-currency platform Coinbase. In mid-March of 2018, Coinbase provided data -- under a federal court order -- on about 13,000 accounts requested by the IRS.
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IRS Sending Warning Letters To More Than 10,000 Cryptocurrency Holders

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 26, 2019 @01:02PM (#58992462)
    They will never find me.

    -Satoshi Nakamoto
  • If your income is $0-$39,375 for fiscal year 2019 and you owned the crypto for more than one year you pay 0% tax.

    https://www.fool.com/retiremen... [fool.com]

    Pays to quit your job if you have a lot.

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )
      Why, do you think the IRS doesn't care about back taxes?

      Legally, the income received through cryptocurrency was always required to be reported. The only thing that has really changed is that the IRS is now starting to follow up on it.

      • Presumably if you put money into Coinbase you already paid tax on that money.

        If you mined it then you pay tax on the income when it paid out into your Crypto wallet. For those that mined when it was $2 per Bitcoin 9 years ago that is below reporting threshold.

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by mark-t ( 151149 )

          And if you put money into a regular bank account, you've already paid tax on that money too.... you still have to declare any interest received as additional income, however.

          Similarly, any increase in the dollar value of cryptocurrency has to be recorded.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          If you put your money into an exchange, there is a good chance they have run off with it, so you can get the luxury of writing off your currency off your taxes. Even the fabled, stable MtGox fell to that.

      • Legally, the income received through cryptocurrency was always required to be reported. The only thing that has really changed is that the IRS is now starting to follow up on it.

        Coincidentally they follow up a year and a half after an exponential rise and sell off. Add late payment penalties. :-)

    • If your income is $0-$39,375 for fiscal year 2019 and you owned the crypto for more than one year you pay 0% tax.

      https://www.fool.com/retiremen... [fool.com]

      Pays to quit your job if you have a lot.

      But selling bitcoin seems to be taxable income? You don't earn money by making less money so you can pay a lower (or no) margin tax.

      Less is not more, it does not make sense. More is more.

    • by dougmc ( 70836 )

      But wouldn't your capital gains income count as "taxable income" for purposes of that "$0-$39,375" figure? (I don't actually know the answer to this, but from what I can find, it does *seem* to be included.)

      So if you made less than $40k in your capital gains then indeed, you'd pay no taxes ... *but you're trying to live on less than $40k*.

      Quitting your job to reduce your tax liability sounds great, but ... *you're also giving up your paycheck*.

      Ultimately, if somebody is in a situation where they actually n

  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    Till they come after you....

  • So, they recognize crypto-currencies as an investment vehicle yet they want to outlaw it? Makes so much sense.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      So, they recognize crypto-currencies as an investment vehicle yet they want to outlaw it? Makes so much sense.

      What did they get Al Capone on again? Oh yeah, tax evasion. Even if it's income from illegal activities, it's still income, and you still owe taxes on it.

      Trump might go down the same way. Just need to get him out of the White House. He can't dance around releasing his taxes forever. What does he have to hide? What's that thing you Trumptards and Conservitards like to say? If you're not guilty, you have nothing to fear? Yeah, that's it.

    • So, they recognize crypto-currencies as an investment vehicle yet they want to outlaw it? Makes so much sense.

      No. They recognize cryptocurrencies as an *asset* but not as a *currency*. Hence all the required reporting of capital gain/loss every time you sell or "spend" a crypto coin (the "spend" is really an asset bartering transaction from their perspective). Outlawing its use as a currency, requiring reporting due to money laundering, etc are consistent with this asset status.

  • Seriously, I'm not joking.

    • How do you know? He hasn't released his returns. He is fighting it though, so he probably has a few skeletons he wants to keep in the dark.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • I can neither confirm nor deny that I know what I know.

      • by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Friday July 26, 2019 @01:52PM (#58992842)

        How do you know? He hasn't released his returns. He is fighting it though, so he probably has a few skeletons he wants to keep in the dark.

        He basically admitted it to Hillary during the debates: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] she claimed he paid no taxes, nothing for troops, vets, schools, health, which would still be just a claim if Trump hadn't responded: "that makes me smart". So we basically have the admission that he pays no taxes for for troops, vets, schools, health, from the laughing lips of Trump himself.

    • "We don't pay taxes. Only the little people pay taxes.” -- Leona Helmsley

  • by perpenso ( 1613749 ) on Friday July 26, 2019 @01:26PM (#58992622)
    Don't forget to calculate the capital gain or loss and report it for the small daily purchases you make with bitcoin. You know, for the coins being spent on that coffee, the difference between the value at the time spent (price of the coffee) and the value at the time you received those coins.

    Why yes that does seem like a crazy thing to have to do but you did choose to buy that coffee with an *asset* not a *currency*.
    • Don't forget to calculate the capital gain or loss and report it for the small daily purchases you make with bitcoin

      Well my guess is that if that became something that was common, then the apps would keep tabs for that for you.

      • Don't forget to calculate the capital gain or loss and report it for the small daily purchases you make with bitcoin

        Well my guess is that if that became something that was common, then the apps would keep tabs for that for you.

        Absolutely, but they have not to date. Hence the problem for people who "buy" (actually they are bartering) goods and services, who believe they are outside the domain of governments and tax agencies.

  • Tax? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Friday July 26, 2019 @01:27PM (#58992630)

    So if you have $5,000 worth of Bitcoin sitting in a wallet, what's the tax implication? From what I understand, there is none until you do something with it. Once you sell it - that's income. If you buy something with it, that's also income. But if it's sitting in a wallet, how is that different than sitting on a stock that doesn't pay dividends? It could go up in price, it could go down in price, you are taxed on it when you sell it and turn some sort of profit.

    • First, cryptocurrencies have so much volatility that anyone who buys and holds them is probably an idiot. If they are selling, it's probably subject to short-term capital gains taxes. Does that mean most cryptocurrency investors are tax evaders? Yes, unless they report their sales transactions. Which I would believe the majority aren't.

      • Does that mean most cryptocurrency investors are tax evaders?

        No. You don't pay taxes on investments where you lost money. But you should be filing your taxes anyway, since you can apply that loss to your future tax burden.

    • Re:Tax? (Score:4, Informative)

      by DigitalisAkujin ( 846133 ) on Friday July 26, 2019 @01:46PM (#58992796) Homepage

      It's simple. You pay the capital gains when you cash out. Just like everything else considered an asset.

      If you mined it you pay income tax on the value of the Bitcoin at the time it was deposited into the wallet. If that was 9 years ago and the value was $2 per Bitcoin you owe about 30 cents on the income tax and now you'd owe capital gains on about 10k or whatever the value was when you cashed out. If you actually owned it for that long though it's considered a long term investment which has its own rules.

      https://www.fool.com/retiremen... [fool.com]

      The rules around this are really only complicated if you day trade.

    • So if you have $5,000 worth of Bitcoin sitting in a wallet, what's the tax implication? From what I understand, there is none until you do something with it. Once you sell it - that's income. If you buy something with it, that's also income. But if it's sitting in a wallet, how is that different than sitting on a stock that doesn't pay dividends? It could go up in price, it could go down in price, you are taxed on it when you sell it and turn some sort of profit.

      Unless... crypto-currency is actually treated like fiat money for the purposes of taxation.

      • So if you have $5,000 worth of Bitcoin sitting in a wallet, what's the tax implication? From what I understand, there is none until you do something with it. Once you sell it - that's income. If you buy something with it, that's also income. But if it's sitting in a wallet, how is that different than sitting on a stock that doesn't pay dividends? It could go up in price, it could go down in price, you are taxed on it when you sell it and turn some sort of profit.

        Unless... crypto-currency is actually treated like fiat money for the purposes of taxation.

        Its not. The IRS declared it an asset long ago. So as the GP indicates there is only a taxable event on sale or barter ("buying" goods or services with an asset). Also, fiat currency is not taxed when held. Perhaps you are thinking of interest *actually paid* to an account holder.

    • Therein lies the rub.
      • If it's an asset, then what you say is true. You don't owe taxes on it until you sell it (assuming you sell it for more than you bought it).
      • If it's a currency, then you owe taxes on the appreciation in value over the year, even if all you do is sit on it. Like you pay tax on interest you earned on a savings account.

      As the cryptocurrency advocates are insisting that cryptocurrencies should be usable like currency (i.e. paying for bills and transactions with them), the IRS is simply

      • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

        If it's a currency, then you owe taxes on the appreciation in value over the year, even if all you do is sit on it. Like you pay tax on interest you earned on a savings account.

        Not at all. Taxes on forex investing [pocketsense.com] are treated similarly to gains and losses on assets and asset-to-asset swaps.

    • Your understanding is correct. As long as you don't sell or trade the bitcoin (or whatever) for something else (including a different crypto-currency) then it is an unrealized capital gain and there is no tax due. When you sell or trade for a profit, that is a realized capital gain, and you need to pay capital gains tax on the increased value only. If you have many purchases at different prices, I am not sure how they decide how to calculate the initial cost. I am sure the IRS has memos on this.

  • Ideological Revenge Service decide to attack and destroy individuals. There is not much a peasant can do except bend over. and be sure to say Thank You afterwards.

    Just my 2 cents ;)
  • do not pay their taxes are given a free ride.

    Federal employees owe $3.3B in back taxes [usatoday.com]

    Over 300k hard working public servants cough, cough. Our new protected class over lords.

    Just my 2 cents ;).
    • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

      Mean while Federal Employees who do not pay their taxes are given a free ride.

      "But federal workers are better at paying their taxes than the average taxpayer. Their delinquency rate of 3.19% is far lower than the 8.7% for the population at large."

      You missed that part, free-riding average taxpayer.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      Always seems weird that federal employees have to pay federal taxes on their federal pay. Government: Here's some money, now give me 20% of it back.
      • Aside from the ease of avoiding special cases, it allows proper accounting of trust funders who join the government and make money on stocks and lets other workers deduct mortgages and charity, etc.

  • The taxman wants it all his way. Profits are taxable but losses are not tax deductible in any jurisdiction I know of.
  • I love the quote at the bottom of the page for this story: The wages of sin are unreported.
    • I love the quote at the bottom of the page for this story: The wages of sin are unreported.

      This is proof that every once in a while the universe laughs at us.

  • Now that quatloos and bitcoin are taxable, how much longer can Monopoly money remain a safe haven?
  • by mamba-mamba ( 445365 ) on Friday July 26, 2019 @04:35PM (#58993948)

    Tax liability is incurred when you sell for more than you paid. This is called a capital gain. Capital gains are taxable in the US.

    As far as the IRS is concerned, if you trade one cryptocurrency for another, that was a de-facto sale followed by a purchase. So if you trade ether for lightcoin or whatever, the IRS views that as a sale followed by a purchase. If you did that in the past and didn't record it, the IRS may fine you and assess back taxes.

    But if you have never sold, then you will not be in trouble with the IRS. Keep track of all your purchases so you can establish a cost basis later. Only the gains are taxable.

    I am amazed at how many people were day trading on coinbase or whatever and had NO IDEA about any of this.

    • Tax liability is incurred when you sell for more than you paid. This is called a capital gain. Capital gains are taxable in the US.

      Yup, people sell something for more than they paid for it and don't realize that it's taxable income. For little stuff it doesn't matter but if you're making any serious money it's taxable just like any other income. If you get caught it's almost certain you'll go through the wringer.

    • I bought a few at $500, sold just past the peak. I'm definitely glad I recorded all of it and handed it all to my tax guy to handle. Yeah, I paid taxes on it but am not clenching right now if I hadn't.

  • The IRS is expanding efforts involving virtual currency, including increased use of data analytics," said IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig.

    TRANSLATION: "We're monitoring your bank accounts, credit cards, traffic on crypto sites, phone calls and texts, and we're cross-indexing it all so we can catch you."

  • Alright, who's the knucklehead who actually TOLD the IRS that they even HAVE a bitcoin wallet?
  • So sick of hearing that buffoon wank on about how Bitcoin and blockchain are the next big thing.

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

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