Coinbase criticized U.S. digital asset regulation, calling the IRS’s new tax reporting rules overly complex. The 1099-DA form risks over-reporting by including stablecoin trades and small gas fees. For this tax year, Coinbase reports only gross proceeds, not cost basis, leaving users to calculate their own capital gains tax.

The platform plans to add cost basis reporting next year to simplify the process. Coinbase has stated that the IRS’s new digital asset tax reporting form, 1099-DA, is overly burdensome and could impose unnecessary administrative pressure on a large number of cryptocurrency holders. The new rules require reporting of minor transactions such as stablecoin trades and network gas fees, despite the fact that stablecoins maintain nearly stable prices and gas fees are typically just a few dollars or less.

Reporting such data could lead to overreporting, unnecessarily complicating the tax system. Currently, Coinbase is distributing 1099-DA forms to millions of U.S. users—a requirement for exchanges to report users’ digital asset transactions to the IRS and provide users with copies for their own tax filings. However, for this year’s filing, Coinbase will only report gross proceeds from digital asset sales to the IRS, not the cost basis; users must calculate their actual taxable gains themselves, which may cause confusion for some investors. Coinbase plans to begin calculating cost basis for users starting next tax year to simplify the filing process.

SPONSORED

Leave a Reply

Sponsored

More Articles

Trending

Discover more from Rich by Coin

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading