EU's DAC8 crypto tax reporting begins in January

The European Union's DAC8 directive takes effect on January 1, requiring crypto-asset service providers to report user and transaction data to tax authorities. This measure aims to enhance tax transparency in the crypto sector, operating alongside the MiCA regulation. Non-compliance after a July 1 deadline could lead to penalties, including asset seizures for tax evasion.

The European Union's latest push for tax transparency in digital assets arrives with the DAC8 directive, effective from January 1. This framework extends the bloc's existing administrative cooperation on taxation to include crypto assets and service providers, such as exchanges and brokers. Under DAC8, these providers must collect and share detailed information on users and transactions with national tax authorities, which will then exchange the data across member states.

This initiative addresses a previous shortfall in tax oversight for cryptocurrencies, bringing visibility to holdings, trades, and transfers on par with traditional bank accounts and securities. DAC8 functions independently from the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, which was adopted in April 2023. While MiCA focuses on licensing, customer protection, and market operations for crypto firms, DAC8 specifically targets tax compliance by providing authorities with essential data to evaluate and enforce obligations.

Although the directive activates on January 1, crypto firms benefit from a grace period until July 1 to update their reporting systems, customer due diligence, and internal controls. Beyond that date, failure to report could incur penalties as defined by national laws. For users, the rules introduce stronger enforcement tools: tax authorities can collaborate across borders to detect evasion, potentially leading to embargoes or seizures of crypto assets, even if held on platforms outside a user's home country.

This development signals a broader integration of crypto into regulated financial systems, aiming to curb tax avoidance while supporting the sector's growth under MiCA.

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U.S. Treasury report illustration showing holographic tech pillars for crypto compliance: AI monitoring, digital ID, blockchain analytics, and data APIs, with privacy mixer endorsement.
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U.S. Treasury report proposes AI, digital ID pillars for crypto compliance; endorses lawful mixer privacy

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The U.S. Treasury Department submitted a report to Congress on March 9, 2026—commissioned under the GENIUS Act—outlining four technological pillars to enhance transparency in cryptocurrency transactions: artificial intelligence for monitoring, digital identity for onboarding, blockchain analytics for tracing, and interoperable data-sharing APIs. It describes digital assets as key to U.S. innovation leadership while acknowledging lawful users' need for privacy tools like mixers on public blockchains, amid risks from illicit exploitation.

A poll of 1,000 American crypto investors reveals that over half are scared of facing IRS penalties due to new automatic reporting requirements for digital asset transactions. Crypto tax platform Awaken Tax conducted the survey at the end of January, highlighting concerns over the shift from self-disclosure to mandatory disclosures by exchanges. The rules, effective for 2025 transactions, aim to curb tax evasion but have sparked confusion among users.

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Cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase has warned that new U.S. tax reporting requirements for digital assets impose unnecessary burdens on retail users and clutter the tax system. The company's tax experts highlighted issues with the IRS's Form 1099-DA, which reports gross proceeds from crypto transactions starting in 2025. They argue that including small transactions, stablecoins, and gas fees leads to over-reporting without real tax implications.

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