Guide · Crypto & Digital Asset Tax Basics

How the IRS Treats Crypto and Digital Assets: Property, Not Currency

The IRS doesn’t view Bitcoin, Ethereum, NFTs, or most tokens as “just like cash.” For federal tax purposes, they’re generally treated as property. That one word drives how gains, losses, income, and reporting work for Sugar Land and Houston-area taxpayers. This guide translates the IRS rules into plain English so you can see what “crypto as property” really means in real life.

Umair Nazir, EA
Written by Umair Nazir, EA
Enrolled Agent · Owner, The Tax Lyfe
Based in Sugar Land · Serving Fort Bend County & greater Houston
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Education only, not tax, investment, or legal advice. The IRS has issued specific guidance on virtual currency and digital assets (including Notice 2014-21 and related FAQs). This article summarizes those ideas in plain English. Always review current IRS guidance and confirm numbers and forms with a professional before you file.

Big picture: crypto is “property” for tax purposes

When the IRS says crypto is treated as property, they’re putting it in the same general bucket as:

  • Stocks and ETFs,
  • Real estate held for investment,
  • Other investment property.

That means most taxable events are about gains and losses when you dispose of the asset. In practice, that shows up as:

  • Capital gains and losses when you sell or trade crypto, and
  • Ordinary income when you receive crypto as payment, mining, staking, etc.
Key idea: For tax purposes, buying and holding crypto is usually not a taxable event. Using, selling, or exchanging it is where tax questions start.

When is a crypto transaction taxable?

Common taxable events for Sugar Land and Houston taxpayers include when you:

  • Sell crypto for dollars (USD).
  • Trade one coin or token for another (BTC → ETH, token A → token B).
  • Spend crypto on goods or services (paying a bill, buying something).
  • Receive crypto as income:
    • Getting paid for work in crypto.
    • Mining rewards.
    • Staking or validator rewards.
    • Certain airdrops or promotional tokens.
  • Dispose of NFTs (selling or trading them).

In each case, the IRS wants you to measure:

  • What the asset was worth in U.S. dollars at the time of the event, and
  • How that compares to what you paid for it (your basis).

When is a crypto transaction usually not taxable?

Some common crypto moves are not taxable by themselves, even though they still matter for recordkeeping:

  • Buying crypto with dollars and just holding it.
  • Transferring crypto between your own wallets or exchanges, with no change in ownership.
  • Letting the price go up or down while you continue to hold.

Even when nothing is taxable yet, those moments still matter because:

  • They set or affect your basis (what you “paid” in IRS eyes).
  • They show how long you’ve held the asset (short-term vs. long-term).

Crypto and capital gains: short-term vs long-term

Since crypto is treated as property, capital gains rules apply when you sell or exchange it.

  • Short-term gain or loss – Crypto held one year or less before you dispose of it.
  • Long-term gain or loss – Crypto held more than one year.

Short-term gains are generally taxed at your ordinary income tax rates, while long-term gains get capital gains rates, which are often lower.

For a deeper dive on how capital gains work generally, you can also read:

Crypto as income: mining, staking, and payments for work

Sometimes crypto shows up not as an investment you bought, but as part of your income. That can include:

  • Getting paid in crypto for freelance or business work.
  • Crypto received as part of your compensation from an employer.
  • Mining rewards or staking rewards that you can actually access and control.
  • Certain promotional airdrops where you have dominion and control over the tokens.

In those situations, the IRS generally treats the fair market value of the crypto in U.S. dollars at the time you receive it as income. That income can show up as:

  • Self-employment income (reported on Schedule C) if you’re running a business or side gig.
  • Wage income (on a W-2) if you’re an employee being paid in crypto.
  • Other income (often on Schedule 1) in certain cases.

After that, the same coins or tokens start their life as property with a basis equal to the value you just picked up as income. When you later sell or trade them, you’ll have a separate capital gain or loss layer on top.

How the IRS expects you to report crypto activity

In recent years, the IRS has made crypto reporting more explicit. On the Form 1040, you’ll see a question near the top asking whether you:

  • Received, sold, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of a digital asset, or
  • Engaged in certain other digital asset transactions.

A few common reporting paths:

  • Sales and trades of crypto – Often reported on Form 8949 and Schedule D, similar to stock sales.
  • Crypto received as business or gig income – Shows up on Schedule C and flows into your main return (with possible self-employment tax).
  • Crypto received as wages – Usually on your W-2 like other pay, with withholding handled by the employer.
  • Certain reward or interest-type income – May show up on Schedule 1 as other income, depending on the facts.

The key is that you don’t get to skip reporting just because a platform didn’t send you a tax form. The IRS cares about the underlying income and gains.

Why good records matter with crypto

Because crypto can move across multiple exchanges, wallets, and apps, it’s easy to lose track of:

  • When you bought each lot.
  • How much you paid (in U.S. dollars).
  • When you sold or traded it, and for how much.

But those details are exactly what you need to compute gains and losses correctly. Practical recordkeeping looks like:

  • Exporting transaction history from each exchange or app at least once a year.
  • Keeping notes when you move coins between your own wallets (to show it was not a sale).
  • Using reputable crypto tax software or working with a pro who can help reconcile multiple sources.

Where this fits with stock sales and other investments

In many homes around Sugar Land and Houston, crypto doesn’t live alone. It sits next to:

  • 401(k) and IRA accounts,
  • Taxable brokerage accounts with stocks and ETFs,
  • Real estate, small businesses, or side hustles.

For planning purposes, it’s often easier to think of crypto as one more type of investment property in your overall capital gains picture, instead of a separate universe.

That’s why I pair this article with:

FAQs: How the IRS treats crypto and digital assets

Does the IRS treat crypto like cash or like stocks?
For federal tax purposes, the IRS generally treats crypto as property, not as traditional currency. In practice, that means it’s handled more like stocks or other investments: you track basis, holding period, and gains or losses when you dispose of it, and you may have separate income when you receive crypto for work or rewards.
If I just buy crypto and hold it, do I owe tax?
Simply buying crypto with dollars and holding it is usually not a taxable event by itself. Tax questions start when you sell, trade, or spend the crypto, or when you receive crypto as income (mining, staking, pay for work, certain airdrops, etc.). You still need to keep good records of your purchases so you can calculate gain or loss later.
Do I have to report crypto if I didn’t receive any tax forms?
Yes. The IRS cares about the underlying income and gains, not only the forms you receive. Even if a platform doesn’t send you a 1099, you’re still responsible for reporting taxable sales, trades, and income. That’s why exporting transaction history and working with a professional (or good software) matters for accuracy.
Is crypto mining or staking income taxed differently from selling crypto?
Often, yes. When you receive mining or staking rewards you can control, the fair market value of that crypto in U.S. dollars is generally treated as income at that moment (sometimes business or self-employment income). Later, when you sell or trade those coins, you have a separate capital gain or loss based on how the value changed from the time you first recognized the income.
How does the IRS know if I did crypto transactions?
In recent years, the IRS has:
  • Added a digital asset question near the top of Form 1040.
  • Received information from certain exchanges and platforms.
  • Used enforcement campaigns focused on virtual currency.
The safest approach is to assume that crypto activity is visible or may become visible, and to answer the 1040 question honestly and report transactions accurately, instead of hoping they stay under the radar.
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