U.S. Treasury Releases 2025 Crypto Tax Rules, Delays Non-Custodial Provisions

The U.S. Treasury Department and IRS unveiled new cryptocurrency tax reporting requirements set to take effect in 2025, though rules targeting decentralized finance (DeFi) and non-custodial wallets have been postponed.

Key Provisions of the 2025 Crypto Tax Framework

  • Broker Reporting Mandate: Digital asset brokers—including exchanges, hosted wallet services, and crypto kiosks—must report customer transactions and gains starting 2026.
  • Cost Basis Tracking: Brokers are required to track and disclose clients’ token acquisition costs beginning with 2025 transactions.
  • Asset Coverage: Rules apply to most cryptocurrencies with limited exceptions:
  • Stablecoins: Only reportable in “very limited circumstances” (e.g., Tether/USDT, USD Coin/USDC)
  • NFTs: Reporting threshold set at $600 in annual gains

👉 Stay compliant with evolving crypto regulations

Deferred Regulations

The Treasury explicitly excluded two areas from immediate implementation:
1. Non-Custodial Wallet Transactions
2. Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Platforms

This delay follows industry feedback about operational challenges in tracking peer-to-peer and self-custodied transactions.

Practical Implications for Crypto Users

  • Taxpayers: No change to existing obligations—all crypto gains remain taxable regardless of broker reporting
  • Investors: Expect more detailed 1099 forms from exchanges beginning 2026
  • Stablecoin Users: Routine stablecoin sales won’t trigger reporting requirements

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: When do these rules take effect?

A: The broker reporting requirements apply to transactions occurring January 1, 2025 onward, with the first reports due in 2026.

Q: Do I need to report NFT sales?

A: Only if your annual NFT profits exceed $600. Smaller amounts don’t require disclosure.

Q: What happens if I use non-custodial wallets?

A: Currently no reporting requirements, but maintain records as these transactions remain taxable.

👉 Essential tools for crypto tax management

Industry Response

Crypto advocates have praised the phased approach:
– “This sensible timeline allows developers to build compliant infrastructure,” said a Coin Center representative
– Exchange operators note the 2026 implementation gives adequate preparation time

The Treasury emphasized this is Phase 1 of digital asset tax policy, with future rulemakings expected to address:
– Mining and staking income
– Hard fork reporting
– Cross-border transactions

Compliance Preparation Checklist

Entity Action Items Deadline
Exchanges Implement cost-basis tracking systems Jan 2025
Wallet Providers Develop transaction reporting APIs Q3 2024
Tax Professionals Update crypto tax guidance Ongoing
Investors Review historical transaction records Before 2026

This regulatory clarity comes as global standards for crypto taxation continue evolving, with the OECD’s Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) set to take effect in 2027.