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Bitcoin Cost Basis Purchases

Personal Finance & Money Asked on August 7, 2021

Suppose that a client purchases 10 BTC over a price range of $180 to $290 and transacts twice with his BTC for a total purchase of 2.7BTC. Two questions:

  1. Based on this, the IRS taxes bitcoin like property, so until it’s converted to fiat, it is not taxed when we’re dealing with the client purchasing and later using it for purchases (note that if the client was receiving bitcoin in the form of income, it would be taxed)?
  2. When converted to fiat, which cost basis does the client use? The earliest/latest purchase of BTC, the highest/lowest purchase of BTC, or an average price?

I’m assuming that any fee assessed for purchasing BTC is not counted in tax information. Thanks all!

2 Answers

  1. As long as the IRS treats bitcoin as property, then whenever you use bitcoin to buy anything you are supposed to consider the capital gain or capital loss. There is no "until it's converted to fiat". You are paying local sales tax and capital gains, or paying local sales tax and reporting capital loss.

  2. As long as you are consistent, you can use either the total cost basis, or individual lot purchases. The same as other property like stocks (except without stock specific regulations like wash-sale rules :D ).

There are a lot of perks or unintentional loopholes for speculators, with the property designation. There are a lot of disadvantages for consumers trying to use it like a currency. Someone mixing investment and spending funds across addresses is going to have complicated tax issues, but fortunately the exchanges have records of purchase times and prices, which you can compare with the addresses you control.

Do note, after that IRS guideline, another federal agency designated Bitcoin as a commodity, which is a subset of "property" with its own more favorable but different tax guidelines.

Correct answer by CQM on August 7, 2021

Also, as to the question of fees, fees associated with the purchase can in general be counted when computing the cost basis, reducing your overall gain when you sell. See, e.g. https://finance.zacks.com/stock-transaction-fees-taxdeductible-8284.html or http://www.finra.org/investors/highlights/cost-basis-basics.

Answered by B. Johnson on August 7, 2021

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