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>>2939944
From what I understand, all reporting is done year-end. No taxes are required to be paid on purchasing bitcoin, but every exchange in which you profit (even 0.001 fiat) must be reported and paid). So if I purchase $40 of bitcoin on coinbase, I don't pay tax on that, but if I sell it two months later for $50, I must first pay capital gains on the $10 profit (28%), which would leave me with like $7, then pay income tax on that $7, leaving me with like $4.50.
It gets confusing though when you buy $40 worth of bitcoins, sell $20 at the 24 hour high, gamble $10 at a poker table, buy $25 with the profit from selling, etc etc.
Am I getting close to a general understanding here, /biz/? It seems like this isn't really worth all the trouble
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>>2939944
>paying taxes on your YoBit ESPER$
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>>2940003
>all reporting is done year-end
correct, with the rest of your taxes, due at the end of April
>No taxes are required to be paid on purchasing bitcoin
correct
> I must first pay capital gains on the $10 profit (28%), which would leave me with like $7, then pay income tax on that $7, leaving me with like $4.50.
Not quite. You don't pay capital gains tax THEN income tax. You pay one rate or the other. Capital gains tax is only a different rate than income tax if you make more than $250k or something in capital gains alone, otherwise it defaults to you income tax bracket.
Just think of it as, every sale you make is a taxable event.
>buy BTC
>no taxes yet
>hodl
>no taxes yet
>sell BTC
TAXABLE EVENT
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>>2939860 (OP)
>>2940044
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>>2940110
Note: Long Term Capital Gains.
Meaning you have to hold the position for over a year in order to pay those rates in the far right columns.
Short term capital gains before a certain threshold are taxed at your income tax bracket's rate.
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>>2940213
Yes. Every sale is a taxable event. Even if you buy a Amazon Gift card with BTC it's a taxable event, because that's technically a sale.
Any losses you incur will offset gains. If you end the year with a net loss, it will offset your normal income tax, assuming you work. Any net losses over $3,000 can be withheld and applied to the next tax year.
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>>2940226
Okay now we're approaching confusionland.
Circling back to my first example of buying $40 worth of bitcoin, say I hold it through an increase and crash, and then sell when it gets back to $40 and "break even". I'd still pay the ~25% short term capital gains tax on that sale and even though I bought and sold at the same price, I'd be losing $10? Fucking shit, dude.
But that loss of $10 could be deducted from federal income taxes deducted from my fiat paycheck? Or it would have to be over 3k
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>>2940254
>I'd still pay the ~25% short term capital gains tax on that sale and even though I bought and sold at the same price, I'd be losing $10? Fucking shit, dude.
No, you'd pay 25% of the profit you made on the sale, which is zero. So zero dollars.
Capital gains are on profits, sale price minus purchase price.
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>>2940254
Buy @ $40 <- Cost basis
Hodl any amount of time
Sell @ $40 <- proceeds
Yeah, it's a taxable event, cause its a sale. That only means this transaction will be documented with your taxes. But you broke even, $0 applied to your net gain/loss.
A Capital gain/loss is calculated as proceeds, less cost basis.
>>2940267
yerp, correct
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I'm pretty retarded and might be wrong, but at the end of the year, whether you tax each transaction individually and add them up or just take your lump sum profit at year's end and tax it at once, the result is the same, right?
Is it necessary to record the dollar equivalent of every BTC-Alt trade you make through the year with this in mind? Seems like a monumental amount of work.
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>>2940272
Not exactly sure what form to use. I use the 1040 for stocks.
This might be helpful... or more confusing https://ttlc.intuit.com/questions/2591167-forex-gains-and-losses
>>2940281
yeah, either way you do it, it'll be the same.
>Is it necessary to record the dollar equivalent of every BTC-Alt trade you make through the year with this in mind?
Technically yes, I would think so.
>Seems like a monumental amount of work.
that's why people who invest in stocks (before e-filling was a thing) had accountants. For stocks, you had to enter each transaction on a form. Now you just import it from the broker.
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Can't wait until the end of the year
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>>2940302
I was just looking at bittrex because of this, and they record the BTC amount, but not the USD equivalent.
I have no issue paying the full income tax rate on everything I make but the record keeping side here quickly becomes ridiculously complex if you want to make any money day trading.
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>>2939860 (OP)
>How do you handle taxes on crypto?
http://www.cryptobizcentral.com/taxes.html
>How do you feel about crypto taxes?
I'm holding out hope that some day in the future, the US and other countries will recognize crypto as currency and not tax them. Maybe have an income tax for mining, but nothing for trading.
>What kind of records do you keep and what forms do you file?
I still have a record of every trade I've made.
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Question out of pure curiosity:if I buy BTC, hodl, have some gains, and then I withdraw through a BTC ATM, does the ATM deduct taxes on the amount you're withdrawing? Or do you have to keep records of it even though it didn't go through your bank account and there's no way to identify wallets?
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>>2940542
You have to report capital gain and when you deposit to fiat.
You buy 10 BTC at 2,000$ USD and sell it 2 weeks later at 2,300$ USD.
You have to report 300$ USD in taxes under whichever regulation cryptocurrency is for your region
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>>2940625
If I trade between LTC and BTC, no government gives a hoot.
The second I trade between BTC and USD/CND/CNY/EUR/..etc they want to know and tax you.
May I remind you taxation is another way for the government to keep track on its citizens to ensure you essentially are not 'lying to your peers' as to say, and commit crime to gain profit in society.
Ironically is the crime organizations that are gaining huge returns from cryptocurrency
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>>2941129
How so? IRS defines cryptocurrency as property (capital asset), and unless said otherwise, like-kind exchange rules apply, as long as you file Form 8824 in the tax year before you cash them out.
Why would they audit you if you report your taxes fairly? I thought they would appreciate this, so wtf. It's way too complex to report fractions of amounts of a bth price to US currency to alt coin price to bth price to US currency, and 1031 is the correct way to do it following the preceding stuff, so what makes you say that?
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>>2939860 (OP)
>cryptos
>paying taxes
youre doing it wrong kid
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>>2939860 (OP)
I don't fucking pay taxes on crypto since even I have no fucking clue how much I've put in or out at this point.
I have made literally tens of thousands of trades in crypto at this point, in multiple fiat currencies, and cashed out pieces here and there for years, sometimes as cash and sometimes to banks. I have no idea how much.
My taxes are literally impossible.
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>>2940572
They can track that very easily if they want to. The site where you buy bitcoins has your identity verified and then the irs can contact the exchange you sent your bitcoins to based on the address and request your full trading history. This is all very easy to track but whether the IRS would even bother depends entirely on your trading volume :D
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>>2942645
the whole point of cryto currencies is to bypass ppl like the feds. If you want to be the retard and cash out in a US bank there by signalling you made money, go ahead. But if your not retarded, you'd book a plane to some off shore tax haven and dump your crypto proceeds there. Plus you think the IRS has the time to look through and trace the entire blockchain of ledger of buys and sells in an unregulated market
Do everyone a favor remove yourself from the gene pool
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>>2940572
Imma say it once more peeps. This is very valuable. Once you realize the importance of offshore companies you and ways to defer taxes, paying taxes on anything, from coffee, to crypto will all make since.
Here it is..ready..yoou sure? Ok.
The taxable event happens once you deposit fiat money back into your bank account and the money that is taxable is whatever amount you gained after original contribution.
so.. You buy $1k worth of bitcoin. You make 2.23k back in 2 months. First that is short term capital gains. So you will be taxed short term capital gains since it was less than 6 months.
Anyways, well the tax is easy. Here it is.
$2,230-$1,000=$1,230 taxable income.
So that 1,230 dollars is taxed at 15% for short term capital gains.
Your total tax need to pay on that is $184.50
Follow this formula and succeed and never worry.
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>>2940044
Hey, if you're still around, I'd appreciate some info. This year I spent about $6000 on crypto and proceeded to lose $2000 of that initial capital. I also spent $3000 on mining equipment and made some money from mining, and while mining I successfully traded. My portfolio is currently worth about $10,500. All in all, I went from about $2000 in the hole at my lowest to about $1,500 in profit at present.
My question is this: will my tax liability simply be, after doing all of the math (which I assume will be a giant headache), the $1500 difference between the total cost of my crypto purchase plus my hardware costs and whatever portfolio value I cash out at, or is there some kind of tax fuckery that could cause me to pay more than I've profited?
tl;dr: Made a lot of mistakes, lost money, learned from them and made better choices, made money, now confused about what the tax man will want.
I am a poorfag and I've never handled more than about $8,000 in one year from low-tier jobs, and I've always just filed taxes with the local taxman and got my little $100 back or whatever, so I'm really dubious about this whole thing.
Thanks for any advice
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>>2943449
Well, tl;dr, if I can't deduct the hardware, it sounds like I'm actually going to end up paying more in capital gains than what I've made in real profit ($1500), which is what worries me. This experience was worthwhile in the sense that I learned some important lessons, but I don't think $1500 is worth the time or trouble I've gone to, and if there is some tax fuckery at the end of it then I'm really not gonna be happy
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Lmaoing at americucks paying tax on burgerking tokens
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>>2943467
This might help: http://www.schwab.com/insights/taxes/investment-expenses-whats-tax-ded uctible
2% floor rule is like: If you made say $100,000 adjusted gross income and spent $5,000 for investment expenses, you could deduct $3,000 of that. $5,000 - (100,000*.02) = 3,000
It looks like it's deductible, but you'll have to itemize your expenses for 2017 rather than take the standard deduction.
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>>2943302
You're going to confuse them with that. I'm an accountant as well. You should mention that net losses on a sale will offset gains, and you pay tax on the NET gain.
>>2943407
So here's the thing, you aren't a business. If you were a business entity, you could easily use your hardware expense to offset your revenue.
You could possibly write off the hardware cost as an expense, BUT you would need to itemize your taxes. That means you'll list a bunch of things that you can use as tax deductions. Things like, Home mortgage interest, Property, state, and local income taxes., Investment interest expense, Medical expense,Charitable contributions, Miscellaneous deductions, and your hardware.
In order for that to make sense for your tax return, those deductions must add up to more than the standard deduction.
The standard deduction for 2017 is $6,350 for any anon filing independently. So, like i said, the only way writing off your hardware looks rational is if you're able to come up with over $6,350 worth of itemized deductions.
>>2943449
>asset
So, i should be able to write off my car's value. My entire house's value? My workstation's value? My stock positions?
I don't think it works like that.
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>>2943498
>>2943511
Thanks for the info,
> but you'll have to itemize your expenses for 2017 rather than take the standard deduction
Does this have any meaningful implications on my bottom line or is it just something I'll encounter when filling out the forms themselves?
My main concern is just that my 'investment' in hardware was such a huge proportion of my current portfolio value ($6000 out of $10,500) and my net profit is so low ($1500) that this will create a problem.
>>2943529
>So here's the thing, you aren't a business.
Can't I file as a sole proprietor somehow? What if I register an LLC (cheap in my state)?
> In order for that to make sense for your tax return, those deductions must add up to more than the standard deduction
I have no other income for this year, I've just been NEETing it up on savings, so I'd have had no tax liability and no deduction otherwise AFAIK
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>>2943542
What the above anon said, if ALL of your itemized expenses are lower than the 2017 standard deduction rate, you should use the standard deduction rate instead. Google the things you can itemize and see if they'll go above the standard deduction rate to know whether to use it or not. You could probably deduct the whole $6,000 (minus the 2% floor) and it would effect your ENTIRE earnings total, not just your gains. But when you cash out the future stuff you won't be able to deduct that hardware again (and will have $0 cost basis on all your mined coins, meaning you'll report the entire amount of the coin as gain when you cash out)
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>>2943542
>Can't I file as a sole proprietor somehow? What if I register an LLC (cheap in my state)?
I'm not sure if it's a great idea to report an LLC making money before it's inception.
This isn't tax law or anything... but, you could try to use the $6000 as cost basis of 1 transaction. Then use everything you've mined with the hardware as the proceeds of that transaction. This would only work in year 1, I think. If it "works" at all.
The way taxes are, they certainly weren't designed with crypto in mind.
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>>2943575
Are my initial crypto purchases included in itemized expenses?
>>2943581
>I'm not sure if it's a great idea to report an LLC making money before it's inception.
I've googled around and it seems like this is perfectly fine, but it's hard to say. I'll do more research before I actually proceed.
It seems so needlessly complicated. I just want to pay them their shakedown money and be on my way. ;_;
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