Home
Notification
Profile
Trending Articles
News
Bookmarked and Liked
History
Creator Center
Settings
Revolver49
2
Posts
Follow
Revolver49
Report
Block User
Follow
55
Following
42
Followers
16
Liked
0
Shared
All Content
Revolver49
--
Bullish
$BTC {spot}(BTCUSDT) #ShareYourThoughtOnBTC
$BTC
#ShareYourThoughtOnBTC
Revolver49
--
#QuizTime una genialata per imparted il valore e le caratteristiche delle crypto
#QuizTime
una genialata per imparted il valore e le caratteristiche delle crypto
Login to explore more contents
Login
Explore the latest crypto news
⚡️ Be a part of the latests discussions in crypto
💬 Interact with your favorite creators
👍 Enjoy content that interests you
Email / Phone number
Sign Up
Login
Trending Topics
USCryptoStakingTaxReview
939,436 views
10,344 Discussing
#USCryptoStakingTaxReview USCryptoStakingTaxReview In the United States, crypto staking is subject to a "two-tier" tax system: it is taxed first as ordinary income when you receive it, and later as capital gains if you sell or trade it. As of December 2023, the primary guidance comes from IRS Revenue Ruling 2023-14, which solidified the requirement to report rewards as income in the year you gain "dominion and control" over them. 1. The Income Tax Event (Receipt) The moment you have the legal right to move, sell, or spend your staking rewards, they are considered taxable income. Valuation: You must record the Fair Market Value (FMV) in USD at the exact time of receipt. Tax Rate: These rewards are taxed at your marginal income tax bracket (ranging from 10% to 37%). Dominion & Control: For locked assets (like ETH staked before the Shapella upgrade), the IRS generally views them as taxable only once they are unlocked and available to you. 2. The Capital Gains Event (Sale/Trade) When you eventually dispose of those rewards (sell for cash, trade for another coin, or buy a coffee), you trigger a second tax event. Cost Basis: Your cost basis for these coins is the FMV you reported as income in Step 1. Calculation: Capital Gain/Loss = Proceeds - Cost Basis. Holding Period: * Short-term: Held for ≤ 1 year (taxed as ordinary income). Long-term: Held for > 1 year (taxed at lower rates: 0%, 15%, or 20%).
trader_Shazuu
3 Likes
761 views
USJobsData
35.7M views
230,286 Discussing
CPIWatch
57.6M views
277,226 Discussing
View More
Latest News
BTC Decline Sparks Bearish Sentiment Among Traders
--
Market Anticipates Low Volatility Amid Holiday Season
--
GSR Transfers Significant Ethereum Holdings to DBS Bank
--
Binance Market Update (2025-12-23)
--
Wallets Compromised in $2.3 Million USDT Theft
--
View More
Sitemap
Cookie Preferences
Platform T&Cs