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Users of Coinbase, PayPal, FTX.US and More Will Be Able to File Crypto Taxes for Free Through TaxBit Network

The network will let all customers of participant businesses access free tax filing tools.

Left to right: TaxBit co-founders Justin and Austin Woodward (Courtesy TaxBit)
Left to right: TaxBit co-founders Justin and Austin Woodward (Courtesy TaxBit)

Utah-based tax software firm TaxBit has launched the TaxBit Network – a supported network of 20 top crypto companies, including Coinbase, Gemini and SuperRare, that will allow clients of supported institutions to access 2021 crypto tax forms at no charge.

Austin Woodward, co-founder and CEO of TaxBit, told CoinDesk he hopes to make the software more accessible – both in terms of cost and ease of filing – and thereby democratize and demystify the crypto tax process.

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Crypto taxes have historically been cumbersome, confusing and often expensive, with annual filing costs running into the thousands of dollars for many crypto holders, Woodward said. For crypto tax do-it-yourselfers, consumer tax aggregators charge by transaction volume, making high-frequency trading particularly expensive come tax season.

The TaxBit Network includes participants from crypto companies BlockFi, OKCoin, Paxos, Coinbase, Strike, Coinlist, CEX.io, Blockchain.com, Gemini, Uphold, FTX.US, Binance.US and Celsius Network as well as more traditional fintech firms such as SoFi, PayPal, and decentralized finance (DeFi) startups like SuperRare and Uniswap, among others.

Woodward told CoinDesk that TaxBit Network’s tax forms will be free to all users, regardless of transaction volume.

“So, no longer if you have a bot trading in the background, do you need to worry about racking up a big tax bill when it comes to preparing your taxes,” Woodward said. “We’ve removed the concept of transaction limits, which no one in the industry has ever done.”

Woodward also hopes that by making crypto taxes easier, it will help to close the much-discussed “tax gap” that the Internal Revenue Service has partially attributed to undisclosed cryptocurrency capital gains.

“Our belief is that it’s not because the crypto community is purposely trying to evade taxes,” Woodward said of the tax gap. “It’s been way too costly and too complicated to figure out.”

Woodward told CoinDesk the response from the crypto industry has been positive, and he expects more companies to join the TaxBit Network before the end of tax season in April.

“The crypto companies want to be in good graces with regulators. They want to help their users report their taxes,” Woodward said. “This isn’t something that has been due to a lack of desire, right? It’s a technological hurdle, and it’s a cost hurdle.”

Participating crypto CEOs seem to agree with Woodward’s assessment.

“Compliance is a key pillar at Gemini and proactively providing our investors with access to tax reporting tools helps our clients stay on top of their cryptocurrency tax obligations while regulation continues to evolve,” Gemini CEO Tyler Winklevoss wrote in a press release.

Users will be able to access the tax forms starting Tuesday, either through the TaxBit Network’s website or, in most cases, via the participating institution’s app.

CORRECTION (Jan. 11, 17:08 UTC): Removes PayPal subsidiary Venmo from list of network members.

Cheyenne Ligon

On the news team at CoinDesk, Cheyenne focuses on crypto regulation and crime. Cheyenne is originally from Houston, Texas. She studied political science at Tulane University in Louisiana. In December 2021, she graduated from CUNY's Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism, where she focused on business and economics reporting. She has no significant crypto holdings.

Cheyenne Ligon