Why your offshore crypto is no longer safe from the taxman


David Klasing, a tax attorney from California, recalls meeting a client whose early cryptocurrency holdings had grown to $700 million in eight years and, having never reported a dime of it, was losing sleep they’d be jailed for tax fraud.

Klasing says he recommended the client complete a voluntary disclosure, a penalty-reducing program for taxpayers who wilfully fail to report foreign assets. By coming forward proactively, they would avoid a criminal prosecution.

“That’s the fix for anybody that has large amounts of unreported crypto,” Klasing said in an interview. “I have people coming to me on a daily basis who are now reading about new reporting requirements the government’s trying to put in place with foreign exchanges, and who haven’t reported anything going back eons.”

There’s no doubt that if you’ve accumulated significant unreported gains on cryptocurrency held off-shore, tax authorities in the U.S., Europe and many other jurisdictions are now on your trail. The Crypto Asset Reporting Framework (CARF), which went into operation in various jurisdictions this month, was designed to align global reporting standards and, basically, compels foreign brokerages and exchanges to open their kimonos to tax authorities.

“I expect to see a lot of countries taking the CARF as an inspiration to establish their own domestic reporting requirements,” said Colby Mangels, head of government solutions at crypto tax compliance firm Taxbit, “We will also see a lot more people educate themselves about crypto tax compliance. Because if you don’t report it, the authorities will find out what’s going on and that’ll be worse.”

The taxman cometh

It was already the case that U.S. taxpayers with cryptocurrency in foreign accounts had to report their holdings to the IRS over certain thresholds. The Foreign Bank Account Reporting (FBAR) requirements apply to accounts over $10,000, while a Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) form must be filled out for foreign assets varying between $50,000 and $100,000-plus.

Of course, crypto was designed to stay out of sight of governments, which means it’s taken some time — bitcoin (BTC) first appeared in 2009 — for tax authorities to get to grips with the asset class, not to mention the global patchwork of exchanges and trading platforms. But it’s a process that has steadily advanced, Klasing said, going all the way back to when the IRS challenged Swiss banking secrecy back in the mid-noughties.

Back then, the agency issued a John Doe summons to Swiss wealth management powerhouse UBS for the names of U.S. taxpayers with undeclared accounts between 2002 and 2007. It’s possible to see similarities between numbered bank accounts and cryptocurrency-controlling alphanumeric keys, with the obvious exception that anyone can be issued with the latter.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *