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Your 2026 Crypto Tax Filing Checklist: 1099-DA, Form 8949, and 5 Costly Mistakes to Avoid

2026 crypto tax filing checklist IRS Form 1099-DA hero
✦ AD‑FREE Updated Mar 30 2026

Published March 30, 2026 · Updated March 30, 2026 · 17‑min read

Davit Cho CEO & Crypto Tax Specialist · LegalMoneyTalk

⏰ Key Filing Data — 2026 Tax Season

  • Filing deadline: April 15, 2026 — 16 days away
  • Extension deadline: October 15, 2026 (Form 4868)
  • New this year: Form 1099-DA (first issuance for 2025 sales)
  • 1099-DA shows: Gross proceeds only — no cost basis for 2025
  • Cost basis reporting by brokers: Begins 2027 (for 2026 transactions)
  • Default method: FIFO per wallet/account (unless specific-ID documented)
  • Notice 2026-20: Specific-ID relief extended through Dec 31, 2026
  • Wash-sale rule: Does NOT apply to crypto
  • BTC price: ~$66,500 (−47% from $126K ATH) — tax-loss harvesting window

The April 15 tax deadline is 16 days away, and if you traded, staked, or received any cryptocurrency during 2025, this filing season is fundamentally different from every year before it.

For the first time, the IRS is receiving Form 1099-DA from crypto exchanges — meaning the government now has direct visibility into your digital asset sales. At the same time, new per-wallet cost basis rules, the FIFO default trap, and ongoing confusion around staking and airdrop income are creating a minefield of potential errors.

This guide gives you everything you need: a complete step-by-step checklist, an explanation of every form involved, the five most expensive mistakes we see taxpayers make, and the tax-loss harvesting opportunity created by Bitcoin's 47% drawdown from its all-time high. Whether you file by April 15 or extend to October 15, this is the article to read before you do either.

1 · Why 2026 Is the Most Important Crypto Tax Year Ever

The 2026 filing season (covering tax year 2025) represents a watershed moment for cryptocurrency taxation in the United States. Three major changes have converged simultaneously, and together they give the IRS more information about your crypto activity than ever before.

The 1099-DA Debut

Starting with tax year 2025, digital asset brokers — including centralized exchanges like Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini — are required to issue Form 1099-DA to both taxpayers and the IRS. Brokers were required to send these forms by February 17, 2026. The form reports gross proceeds from digital asset sales, giving the IRS a direct data point to match against your filed return.

However, there is a critical catch: for 2025 transactions, most 1099-DA forms do not include cost basis. The IRS explicitly warned in Tax Tip 2026-07 that "most of these statements will not include the basis for DA transactions in 2025 and taxpayers will have to calculate basis to determine their gain or loss." Cost basis reporting by brokers does not begin until 2027 for 2026 transactions.

IRS Data Matching Is Live

The IRS now runs automated matching between broker-reported 1099-DA proceeds and amounts reported on your Form 8949 and Schedule D. If you reported $25,000 in proceeds but your exchange reported $40,000, the IRS's Automated Underreporter (AUR) system will flag the discrepancy and generate a CP2000 notice — often with proposed taxes, penalties, and interest included. This is the same system that has caught stock and bond misreporting for decades, now extended to crypto.

The Per-Wallet Cost Basis Shift

Under Rev. Proc. 2024-28, the IRS established that starting January 1, 2025, cost basis must be tracked on a per-wallet, per-account basis. The one-time safe harbor that allowed taxpayers to allocate unused basis across wallets expired December 31, 2024. If you did not act before that deadline, your cost basis may now be fragmented across accounts — and FIFO applies by default within each account.

IRS: Reminders About Digital Assets → About Form 1099-DA →

2 · Your Step-by-Step Filing Checklist

Whether you file yourself or work with a tax professional, follow this sequence. Each step builds on the previous one.

#StepDetails
1Answer the Digital Asset QuestionForm 1040 asks: "At any time during the tax year, did you receive, sell, exchange, or otherwise dispose of a digital asset?" Answer Yes if you had any crypto activity. This includes staking rewards, airdrops, and crypto-to-crypto trades — not just fiat cash-outs.
2Gather Your 1099-DA FormsCollect 1099-DA from every exchange you used. Check email, exchange dashboards, and IRS.gov. If any are missing or late, contact the exchange. Do not skip this step — the IRS already has their copy.
3Export Transaction HistoryDownload CSV transaction exports from every exchange and wallet. Include deposits, withdrawals, trades, staking rewards, and airdrops. This is your source-of-truth for cost basis.
4Reconcile 1099-DA vs. Your RecordsCompare exchange-reported proceeds to your own data. Flag mismatches, missing transfers, and duplicate entries. This prevents CP2000 notices.
5Calculate Cost BasisFor each disposal, determine: acquisition date, cost basis (purchase price + fees), holding period. Remember: 1099-DA does NOT provide basis for 2025. You must calculate it yourself.
6Fill Out Form 8949Report each disposal: description, date acquired, date sold, proceeds, cost basis, gain or loss. Use Box A (1099-DA with basis), Box B (1099-DA without basis), or Box C (no 1099-DA).
7Transfer Totals to Schedule DAggregate short-term and long-term totals from all Form 8949 pages onto Schedule D (Form 1040).
8Report Ordinary IncomeStaking rewards, mining income, airdrops, and referral bonuses go on Schedule 1 or Schedule C (if self-employed). Report at fair market value when received.
9File or ExtendFile by April 15 if ready. If not, file Form 4868 for an automatic extension to October 15. Pay estimated taxes owed by April 15 regardless.
πŸ’‘ Pro Tip:

Use crypto tax software (Koinly, CoinLedger, CoinTracker, TokenTax) to automate steps 3–7. These tools import exchange data, calculate cost basis, and generate Form 8949 — often with direct TurboTax or TaxAct integration.

3 · Form 1099-DA Explained

Form 1099-DA crypto broker reporting explained 2026

Form 1099-DA (Digital Asset Proceeds from Broker Transactions) is the crypto equivalent of the 1099-B that stock brokers have issued for decades. Here is what you need to know about its first year.

What 1099-DA Shows (2025 Tax Year)

For the 2025 tax year, Form 1099-DA reports gross proceeds from disposals — the total amount you received when selling or exchanging digital assets through a custodial broker. It also includes the date and type of each transaction. This information goes to both you and the IRS.

What 1099-DA Does NOT Show (2025 Tax Year)

For 2025 transactions, most 1099-DA forms will not include your cost basis. This is because broker cost-basis reporting is not mandatory until 2027 (for 2026 transactions). The IRS explicitly confirmed this in Tax Tip 2026-07. This means if you rely solely on the 1099-DA, you may overstate your gains by the full amount of proceeds — because without basis, the IRS assumes your basis is zero.

What If Your 1099-DA Is Late or Missing?

The deadline for brokers to send 1099-DA was February 17, 2026. If yours has not arrived, contact the exchange directly. Some platforms experienced delays — Kugelman Law noted that Coinbase and Kraken had issues with initial 1099-DA delivery. If you cannot obtain it in time, file Form 4868 for an extension and reconcile during the extension period. But remember: you must still report all transactions whether or not you receive a form.

What If 1099-DA Numbers Don't Match Your Records?

Transfers between your own wallets can appear as "disposals" on some exchanges, inflating reported proceeds. Compare your 1099-DA line by line against your actual trading history. If there is a mismatch, report your correct numbers on Form 8949 and attach an explanation. Do not simply copy incorrect 1099-DA numbers.

IRS: Understanding Your 1099-DA →

4 · Form 8949 + Schedule D: Reporting Your Crypto

Form 8949 Schedule D crypto reporting guide

Every crypto disposal — sale, swap, or use as payment — must be reported on Form 8949 (Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets). The totals then flow to Schedule D (Capital Gains and Losses), which is filed with your Form 1040.

Form 8949 Columns

ColumnWhat to Enter
(a) DescriptionE.g., "1.5 BTC" or "0.8 ETH"
(b) Date AcquiredThe date you originally purchased or received the asset
(c) Date SoldThe date you sold, swapped, or used the asset
(d) ProceedsFair market value at time of sale (should match 1099-DA if reported)
(e) Cost BasisWhat you paid, including transaction fees and gas fees
(f) CodeAdjustment code if applicable (see below)
(g) AdjustmentAmount of adjustment
(h) Gain or Loss(d) minus (e), adjusted by (g)

Which Box to Check?

Form 8949 has three checkbox categories. For the 2025 tax year, most crypto transactions will fall under Box B (1099-DA received but basis NOT reported to IRS) or Box C (no 1099-DA received at all). Box A (basis reported to IRS) will become more common starting with 2026 transactions when broker basis reporting becomes mandatory.

Short-Term vs. Long-Term

Form 8949 has two sections: Part I for short-term (held ≤ 1 year) and Part II for long-term (held > 1 year). The distinction matters significantly for taxes. For the 2025 tax year, short-term gains are taxed at ordinary income rates (10%–37%), while long-term gains enjoy preferential rates of 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on income. For a single filer, the 0% rate applies up to $48,350 in taxable income, the 15% rate covers $48,351–$533,400, and the 20% rate applies above $533,400.

Schedule D

After completing all Form 8949 pages, transfer your aggregate short-term and long-term totals to Schedule D. This form calculates your net capital gain or loss for the year. If you have a net loss, you can deduct up to $3,000 per year against ordinary income, with unlimited carry-forward to future years.

IRS: Instructions for Form 8949 → IRS: Topic 409 – Capital Gains →

5 · The FIFO Trap and Cost Basis Rules

FIFO cost basis trap crypto tax 2026

Cost basis is the single most consequential number on your tax return. It determines whether you owe $300 or $30,000. And in 2026, the rules have gotten more complex than ever.

FIFO: The Default That Can Crush You

FIFO (First-In, First-Out) is the IRS default method for crypto. It assumes you sell your oldest units first. If you bought BTC at $5,000 in 2020 and also at $90,000 in 2024, and you sell 1 BTC today at $66,500, FIFO assigns the $5,000 basis — giving you a $61,500 taxable gain. If you could choose specific identification and select the $90,000 lot, your result would be a $23,500 loss instead. That is an $85,000 difference in taxable income on a single coin.

Specific Identification: The Alternative

The IRS allows specific identification, which lets you choose exactly which lots to sell. But there are strict rules: you must provide written instructions to your broker at or before trade execution specifying the lot you want to dispose of. Retroactive lot selection is prohibited and will result in automatic FIFO treatment.

Notice 2026-20: Temporary Relief Extended

On March 18, 2026, the IRS released Notice 2026-20, extending the temporary relief for digital asset specific-identification through December 31, 2026. During this relief period, taxpayers may use alternative methods to adequately identify which units are being sold — even if their broker's system does not yet fully support the required documentation. This is a one-year extension of the prior relief under Notice 2025-7. However, this applies only to assets held in a broker's custody, not self-custodied wallets.

Per-Wallet Tracking: The New Reality

Since January 1, 2025 (per Rev. Proc. 2024-28), cost basis must be tracked on a per-wallet, per-account basis. You can no longer pool basis across multiple exchanges. If you hold BTC on Coinbase, Kraken, and a hardware wallet, each is a separate basis pool with its own FIFO queue unless you elect specific identification.

πŸ’‘ Pro Tip:

If you are an active trader using multiple exchanges, specific identification with proper documentation can save thousands of dollars annually. Set up a standing instruction protocol with each exchange before executing trades.

IRS Notice 2026-20 (PDF) → Rev. Proc. 2024-28 (PDF) →

6 · 5 Costly Mistakes to Avoid

These are the five most expensive errors we see taxpayers make during crypto tax season. Each one can trigger IRS notices, penalties, or inflated tax bills.

❌ Mistake #1: Not Reconciling Your 1099-DA

The IRS now data-matches 1099-DA proceeds against your Form 8949. If there is a mismatch — even due to a legitimate transfer being misclassified as a sale — you will receive a CP2000 notice with proposed taxes plus a 20% accuracy-related penalty. Always compare your 1099-DA line by line against your own records before filing.

❌ Mistake #2: Not Reporting Crypto-to-Crypto Trades

Many taxpayers believe only fiat cash-outs are taxable. This is wrong. Every crypto-to-crypto swap (BTC → ETH, SOL → USDC, etc.) is a taxable event. The IRS treats each swap as a sale of the first asset at fair market value. With data-matching now in effect, unreported swaps are easily flagged.

❌ Mistake #3: Falling Into the FIFO Trap

If you do not document specific identification before trade execution, the IRS defaults to FIFO — selling your oldest, cheapest lots first and maximizing your taxable gain. For long-term holders who accumulated at low prices, this can result in gains tens of thousands of dollars higher than necessary. As detailed in Section 5, proper lot selection can dramatically reduce your tax bill.

❌ Mistake #4: Forgetting Staking, Airdrop, and Mining Income

Staking rewards, airdrops, mining income, and referral bonuses are all taxable as ordinary income at fair market value when received (IRS Rev. Ruling 2023-14). This is separate from capital gains. Many taxpayers report their trading gains but forget to include $2,000 in staking rewards — which the IRS may now see through 1099-DA or 1099-MISC reporting.

❌ Mistake #5: Missing April 15 Without Filing an Extension

The failure-to-file penalty is 5% of unpaid taxes per month, up to 25% total. The failure-to-pay penalty adds another 0.5% per month plus interest. Filing Form 4868 takes 5 minutes and gives you until October 15. There is no reason to miss the deadline — even if your crypto records are incomplete, file the extension and pay your best estimate.

Penalty Summary

Penalty TypeRateMax
Failure to file5% of unpaid tax / month25% total
Failure to pay0.5% of unpaid tax / month25% total
Accuracy-related (negligence)20% of underpayment
Fraud75% of underpayment
Criminal tax evasionUp to $100K fine + 5 years prison

Sources: IRS: Accuracy-Related Penalty, CoinTracking, Gordon Law

7 · Tax-Loss Harvesting in a War Market

Crypto tax loss harvesting BTC drawdown 2026

With Bitcoin trading at approximately $66,500 — down 47% from its all-time high of $126,000 — and the broader crypto market under pressure from the Iran war, oil shock, and Nasdaq correction, the current environment presents one of the most compelling tax-loss harvesting opportunities in recent memory.

How It Works

Tax-loss harvesting is the strategy of selling an asset at a loss to realize a capital loss for tax purposes. The loss can offset capital gains dollar-for-dollar, and up to $3,000 of excess losses can be deducted against ordinary income each year. Any remaining losses carry forward indefinitely to future tax years.

The Crypto Advantage: No Wash-Sale Rule

Unlike stocks and securities, cryptocurrency is not subject to the IRS wash-sale rule as of 2026. This means you can sell BTC at a loss and immediately repurchase it — locking in the tax loss while maintaining your exact same position. With stocks, you would need to wait 30 days, risking price movement. Crypto has no such restriction.

Example: BTC Purchased at $100,000

ItemAmount
Purchase price (2024)$100,000
Current price (Mar 30 2026)$66,500
Realized loss−$33,500
Tax savings at 20% LTCG rate$6,700
Tax savings at 37% ordinary income rate (if offsetting ST gains)$12,395

After selling, you immediately repurchase BTC at $66,500 — your new (lower) cost basis. You maintain the same number of coins, but you've locked in the $33,500 loss for tax purposes.

πŸ’‘ Pro Tip:

While the wash-sale rule does not currently apply to crypto, proposed legislation could change this in future years. Harvest losses now while the advantage exists. Monitor CLARITY Act developments for potential wash-sale changes.

Koinly: Tax-Loss Harvesting Guide → Related: Iran War Day 30 – Market Impact →

8 · Need More Time? Filing an Extension (Form 4868)

If your crypto records are incomplete, your 1099-DA is missing or inaccurate, or you simply need more time to get it right, filing an extension is the smart move. A clean, accurate return filed in October is always better than a rushed, error-filled return filed in April.

How Form 4868 Works

File Form 4868 (Application for Automatic Extension of Time to File) by April 15, 2026. This grants an automatic six-month extension, moving your filing deadline to October 15, 2026. No reason required — the extension is automatic.

Critical Rule: Extension ≠ Extra Time to Pay

An extension gives you more time to file, not more time to pay. You must still estimate and pay any taxes owed by April 15 to avoid failure-to-pay penalties and interest. If your estimate is uncertain, it is safer to overpay slightly and receive a refund when you file the complete return.

How to File

MethodDetails
IRS Free FileFile Form 4868 electronically at no cost through IRS Free File partners
Tax softwareTurboTax, H&R Block, and other platforms include extension filing
Pay onlineMaking a payment through IRS Direct Pay and indicating it is for an extension can serve as your extension request
MailPrint and mail Form 4868 with payment (keep proof of mailing)

Don't Forget State Extensions

Many states accept the federal extension automatically, but some require a separate state extension form or payment. Check your state's Department of Revenue website before assuming you are covered.

IRS: About Form 4868 → IRS: Get an Extension →

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to report crypto if I didn't receive a 1099-DA?

Yes. The IRS requires you to report all crypto transactions whether or not you receive a Form 1099-DA. You are responsible for tracking every taxable event — sales, swaps, staking rewards, airdrops, and mining income. The 1099-DA is an information document, not a prerequisite for reporting. As the IRS stated in Tax Tip 2026-07: "Every taxpayer must report any related income, gains, or losses, whether they receive a Form 1099-DA or not."

Are crypto-to-crypto trades taxable?

Yes. Trading one cryptocurrency for another (e.g., BTC → ETH, SOL → USDC) is treated as a sale of the first asset. You must calculate capital gain or loss based on the fair market value at the time of the swap minus your cost basis in the asset you disposed of. This applies even if you never converted to U.S. dollars.

Can I change from FIFO to specific identification mid-year?

Yes. You can use different cost basis methods for different transactions and even for different cryptocurrencies. However, you cannot retroactively change a completed transaction's lot selection. If you used FIFO for January trades, those are locked in. Starting with your next trade, you can implement specific identification — but you must provide written instructions to your broker at or before trade execution.

Does the wash-sale rule apply to crypto in 2026?

No. As of the 2025 and 2026 tax years, the IRS wash-sale rule (which prevents claiming losses on securities sold and repurchased within 30 days) does not apply to cryptocurrency. You can sell crypto at a loss and immediately repurchase to lock in the tax loss while maintaining your position. However, proposed legislation may extend wash-sale rules to crypto in future years.

What happens if I miss April 15 without filing an extension?

The IRS imposes a failure-to-file penalty of 5% of unpaid taxes per month, up to 25% total. On top of that, the failure-to-pay penalty adds 0.5% per month plus interest. Filing Form 4868 by April 15 gives you an automatic 6-month extension to October 15, 2026. The extension takes minutes to file and completely eliminates the failure-to-file penalty — making it one of the most important 5-minute tasks of the entire tax year.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Tax laws are complex and change frequently. Consult a qualified tax professional or CPA before making any tax decisions. LegalMoneyTalk is not responsible for any penalties, losses, or liabilities resulting from decisions made based on this article. Data accurate as of March 30, 2026; IRS rules and market conditions may have changed since publication.

Bitcoin Crashed 49% From ATH — Here's What the IRS Expects You to Do Before April 15 (2026 Filing Guide)

Bitcoin crashed 49 percent from all-time high with IRS April 15 2026 tax filing deadline clock and Form 1099-DA overlay

On October 6, 2025, Bitcoin touched $126,198 — the highest price in its 17-year history. Five months later, it is trading below $65,000. That is a 49% drawdown, accelerated by President Trump's announcement of a 15% global tariff on February 21, 2026, just two days after the Supreme Court struck down his earlier tariff authority.

Meanwhile, something else landed in your inbox for the very first time: Form 1099-DA. This is Year One. Every trade you executed on Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, or Robinhood in 2025 has been reported directly to the IRS — gross proceeds, transaction dates, and asset descriptions. The IRS matching computer is live. Your return is due April 15, 2026 — roughly 50 days from today.

Here is the problem: your 1099-DA almost certainly shows $0 cost basis for transferred assets. That means the IRS sees your entire sale as pure profit. If you do not fix this before you file, you will either overpay by thousands of dollars or trigger a CP2000 underreporter notice.

This guide walks you through everything the IRS expects you to do — and every legal strategy available to you — before that deadline hits.

Jump to the 7-Step Action Plan ↓

Quick Facts: The 2026 Crypto Tax Filing Landscape

Bitcoin All-Time High$126,198 (Oct 6, 2025) — source
Current Price (Feb 24, 2026)~$64,000 — down 49% from ATH
Crash CatalystTrump 15% global tariff (Feb 21, 2026) — CNBC
New Form This YearForm 1099-DA — Year One of broker reporting to IRS
Cost Basis on 1099-DA?NOT required for 2025 transactions; begins with 2026 sales
Filing DeadlineApril 15, 2026 (extension: October 15, 2026)
Americans Holding Crypto~65 million (28% of adults) — Frazier & Deeter
Wash Sale Rule for Crypto?Does NOT apply (crypto = property, not security)
Capital Loss Deduction Cap$3,000/year against ordinary income (unlimited carryforward)
Standard Deduction 2026$16,100 single / $32,200 MFJ (OBBBA-adjusted) — IRS
Read: 50% of Crypto Holders Fear IRS Penalties →

What Just Happened: From $126K to $64K in Five Months

Bitcoin's parabolic run through 2025 was fueled by spot ETF inflows, the April 2024 halving cycle, and a crypto-friendly White House under President Trump. The price ripped from $67,000 in January 2025 to a record $126,198 on October 6, 2025, according to Investopedia.

Then the macro environment turned hostile. A series of trade-policy shocks began unwinding the rally. On February 21, 2026, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that Trump's earlier emergency tariffs exceeded his constitutional authority, per Bitcoin Magazine. Bitcoin briefly spiked on the news. Hours later, Trump signed a new executive order invoking a 1974 statute to impose a 15% global tariff for up to 150 days, as reported by CoinDesk. Bitcoin immediately reversed, falling 5% below $65,000 over the weekend.

The result: a 49% peak-to-trough drawdown. Prediction markets on Polymarket show a 61% probability that Bitcoin will fall below $50,000 at some point in 2026, per MEXC research. Barron's reports BTC is already down 25% since the start of 2026 alone.

For tax purposes, this crash creates a massive window of opportunity — and a minefield of compliance risk. Every sale you made in 2025 at prices between $67K and $126K is now locked into your 1099-DA. If you are sitting on unrealized losses in 2026, you can harvest them right now — and because the wash sale rule does not apply to crypto, you can re-buy immediately.

Warning: Even if your portfolio is deep in the red, the IRS still expects you to report every 2025 transaction. A loss does not excuse non-filing. The penalty for late filing is 5% of unpaid taxes per month, capped at 25%.
CNBC: Bitcoin Falls After Trump 15% Tariff →

Your 1099-DA Arrived. Now What?

Comparison of what the IRS sees on Form 1099-DA with zero cost basis versus what you should report on Form 8949 with correct cost basis

Form 1099-DA is the crypto equivalent of the 1099-B that stock brokers have issued for decades. For the first time, the IRS receives a copy of every digital asset sale you executed through a U.S.-based exchange in 2025. The form was due to taxpayers by February 17, 2026, per IRS.gov.

The Basis Gap Problem

For tax year 2025, brokers are required to report gross proceeds only — not cost basis. Cost basis reporting is mandatory starting with transactions executed on or after January 1, 2026, per the IRS final regulations. This means your 2025 Form 1099-DA will show how much you sold for — but not how much you originally paid.

The risk is enormous. If you transferred 2 BTC from a Ledger hardware wallet to Coinbase and sold for $200,000, Coinbase reports $200,000 in gross proceeds to the IRS with no cost basis attached. The IRS automated matching program treats missing basis as $0 basis — meaning it sees a $200,000 capital gain. If your actual cost basis was $150,000, you should owe tax on only $50,000. But the IRS does not know that unless you tell them on Form 8949.

The Reconciliation Trap

The IRS matching system compares your Form 1040, Schedule D, and Form 8949 against every 1099-DA filed by brokers. A mismatch triggers a CP2000 notice — an automated letter proposing additional tax, penalties, and interest. According to a CPA's analysis on Reddit, the most common mistake is failing to include transactions from a 1099-DA on your return, or reporting different gross proceeds than what the broker filed.

Delayed Forms Add Pressure

Major exchanges including Coinbase and Kraken have reported significant delays in issuing 1099-DA forms, with some taxpayers not receiving their forms until March 18 or later, per Kugelman Law. If your form arrives mid-March, you have less than 30 days to reconcile potentially hundreds of transactions before April 15.

Key Point: The 1099-DA reports gross proceeds to the IRS. YOU are responsible for providing the correct cost basis on Form 8949. If you do not, the IRS assumes $0 basis and taxes your entire sale as gain.
IRS: About Form 1099-DA → Our Guide: IRS Form 8949 for Crypto →

Your 7-Step Crypto Tax Action Plan Before April 15

Seven-step crypto tax action plan checklist before April 15 2026 IRS deadline with color-coded preparation optimization and extension phases
1

Gather Every 1099-DA From Every Exchange

Log into each platform where you traded in 2025: Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, Robinhood, Binance.US, Crypto.com. Download every 1099-DA issued to you. If you used a decentralized exchange (Uniswap, dYdX), those platforms do not issue 1099-DAs — you are solely responsible for reporting those transactions. Cross-reference your exchange transaction histories with your 1099-DA forms to ensure nothing is missing.

2

Check for Missing or Delayed Forms

Coinbase and Kraken have notified some users that their 1099-DA may arrive as late as March 18, 2026. If your form has not arrived, do not wait — log into your account and download your full transaction history as a CSV file. This data is your backup for reconstructing the information manually or through crypto tax software.

3

Reconstruct Cost Basis for Transferred Assets

This is the most critical step. For any crypto that was transferred from a personal wallet, another exchange, or a DeFi protocol before being sold, you must establish the original purchase date and price. Dig up old exchange confirmations, email receipts, blockchain explorer records (Etherscan, Blockchain.com), and wallet transaction logs. If you cannot find the original purchase records, use the fair market value on the date you received the asset as your cost basis, per Koinly's cost basis guide.

4

Choose Your Accounting Method — And Stick With It

You must select an accounting method for identifying which lots are sold: FIFO (First In, First Out) is the IRS default, LIFO (Last In, First Out) sells your newest purchases first, and HIFO (Highest In, First Out) sells your most expensive lots first, minimizing taxable gain. Example: If you bought 1 BTC at $30K, 1 BTC at $60K, and 1 BTC at $100K, then sold 1 BTC for $65K — FIFO shows a $35K gain, LIFO shows a $5K gain, and HIFO shows a $35K loss. The method you choose must be applied consistently. Note that beginning with 2026 transactions, brokers will default to FIFO unless you provide specific lot identification instructions.

5

Identify Tax-Loss Harvesting Opportunities (No Wash Sale Rule)

With Bitcoin down 49% from its ATH, you may be holding significant unrealized losses in your 2026 portfolio. Because the wash sale rule under IRC §1091 does not apply to cryptocurrency — crypto is classified as property, not a security — you can sell at a loss and immediately re-purchase the same asset. This crystallizes the loss for tax purposes without changing your market exposure. Capital losses offset capital gains dollar-for-dollar, and excess losses offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year with unlimited carryforward. See our Tax-Loss Harvesting Guide for full strategies.

6

Run Form 8949 + Schedule D Through Crypto Tax Software

Import your exchange CSVs and wallet addresses into CoinTracker, Koinly, or CoinLedger. These platforms auto-match transfers across wallets, reconstruct cost basis, and generate IRS-ready Form 8949 and Schedule D. Double-check the output against your 1099-DA to ensure gross proceeds match. Any discrepancy between your 8949 and the 1099-DA the IRS receives will be flagged by the automated matching program.

7

If Not Ready → File Form 4868 by April 15

If your 1099-DA is delayed, your basis is unresolved, or your transaction volume is simply too high to reconcile in time, file Form 4868 by April 15, 2026 for an automatic six-month extension to October 15, 2026. You can file electronically through IRS Free File at no cost. Critical: the extension applies to filing only — it does not extend the payment deadline. Estimate your tax liability and pay it by April 15 to avoid the 0.5% per month late-payment penalty.

Pro Tip: Even if you expect a refund, filing Form 4868 protects you from the 5%-per-month failure-to-file penalty if your calculations turn out to be wrong. It costs nothing and takes 5 minutes.
File Form 4868 Free on IRS.gov → Guide: Per-Wallet Cost Basis Tracking →

The Wash Sale Loophole: Still Open in 2026 (Maybe Not for Long)

The wash sale rule, codified in IRC §1091, prevents investors from claiming a tax loss if they buy a "substantially identical" security within 30 days before or after the sale. It applies to stocks, bonds, and other securities. It does not apply to cryptocurrency.

This is not a loophole in the casual sense — it is the plain text of the law. The IRS classifies crypto as property under Notice 2014-21, and property is not subject to wash sale restrictions. TurboTax confirmed this in their January 2026 guidance. CoinLedger, Kiplinger, and TokenTax all concur as of February 2026.

In practice, this means you can sell 1 BTC at a $30,000 loss on Monday, re-buy 1 BTC on Tuesday, and claim the $30,000 loss on your 2026 return. Your market position is unchanged; your tax bill drops by thousands. With stocks, this move would disallow the loss entirely.

Why This May Be the Last Year

Forbes reported in December 2025 that "2025 may be the last time taxpayers can take advantage" of the crypto wash sale gap. Multiple legislative proposals — including provisions discussed in the White House's digital asset recommendations — would extend wash sale rules to cover digital assets. The Cadwalader 2026 Crypto Tax Forecast specifically flags this as a high-probability legislative change. A discussion draft already proposes applying wash sale rules to cryptocurrency starting as early as 2027.

Bottom Line: The wash sale loophole is legal and available right now for 2025 and 2026 transactions. But smart investors are harvesting losses aggressively because this window may close. If you are sitting on unrealized losses from the current crash, consider acting before legislative action eliminates this advantage.
Full Guide: Crypto Tax-Loss Harvesting →

Capital Losses: How the Math Actually Works

The mechanics of capital loss deductions confuse many crypto investors, particularly the $3,000 annual limit. Here is exactly how the system works under current law.

When you sell crypto at a loss, the loss is classified as either short-term (held 1 year or less) or long-term (held more than 1 year). Short-term losses first offset short-term gains, which are taxed at your ordinary income rate of 10% to 37%. Long-term losses first offset long-term gains, which are taxed at preferential rates of 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on income. After netting within each category, any remaining net loss crosses over to offset the other category.

If your total capital losses exceed your total capital gains for the year, the excess loss offsets up to $3,000 of ordinary income ($1,500 if married filing separately). Any remaining loss carries forward indefinitely to future tax years — there is no expiration.

Example: 2025 Filing Scenario

TransactionTypeGain / Loss
Sold ETH bought 3 months agoShort-term+$8,000 gain
Sold BTC bought 2 months agoShort-term-$22,000 loss
Sold SOL bought 14 months agoLong-term+$5,000 gain
Net Short-Term-$14,000
Net Long-Term+$5,000
Overall Net Loss-$9,000
Deduction against ordinary income (2025)-$3,000
Carryforward to 2026-$6,000

In this scenario, the investor pays zero capital gains tax and reduces their ordinary income by $3,000. The remaining $6,000 loss carries into 2026. Importantly, capital losses from crypto can offset stock gains — and vice versa. They are all reported on the same Schedule D.

Short-Term vs Long-Term Rates for 2025

Holding PeriodTax RateApplies To
≤ 1 year (short-term)10% – 37% (ordinary income rates)Day trades, swing trades, DeFi flips
> 1 year (long-term)0% / 15% / 20%Long-term HODL positions sold
Net Investment Income Tax+3.8%AGI above $200K single / $250K MFJ

For high-income taxpayers, the effective maximum rate on short-term crypto gains is 40.8% (37% + 3.8% NIIT). This is why harvesting losses against short-term gains produces the greatest tax savings — every dollar of short-term loss offsets income that would otherwise be taxed at up to 40.8%.

Compare: Best Crypto Tax Software →

Can't File by April 15? Your Form 4868 Extension Guide

If your 1099-DA has not arrived, your cost basis is a mess, or you simply need more time, filing Form 4868 is the single most important protective action you can take. Here is what it does and does not do.

What Form 4868 Does

Filing Form 4868 by April 15, 2026 gives you an automatic six-month extension to file your Form 1040, moving the deadline to October 15, 2026. You do not need a reason. You do not need IRS approval. The extension is automatic upon submission. You can file electronically through IRS Free File, through your tax software, or by mailing the paper form.

What Form 4868 Does NOT Do

It does not extend the payment deadline. You must estimate your total tax liability for 2025 and pay that amount by April 15. If you owe taxes and do not pay by the original deadline, the IRS charges a failure-to-pay penalty of 0.5% of the unpaid amount per month, plus interest at the federal short-term rate plus 3%. Per TurboTax, the failure-to-file penalty (5% per month, max 25%) is ten times worse than the failure-to-pay penalty — so even if you cannot pay in full, always file the extension.

Penalty Comparison

ScenarioPenaltyMonthly RateMaximum
Filed extension + paid on timeNone0%$0
Filed extension + paid lateFailure-to-pay0.5%/month25%
No extension + filed late + paid lateBoth penalties5.5%/month combined47.5%
Crypto-Specific Reason to Extend: If your Coinbase or Kraken 1099-DA is delayed until mid-March, rushing to file by April 15 with incomplete data creates mismatch risk. Filing an extension gives you until October 15 to properly reconcile every transaction and reconstruct missing cost basis.
File Form 4868 Free on IRS.gov →

Crypto Tax Software Comparison: 1099-DA Reconciliation Features

Given the complexity of the first 1099-DA filing season, crypto tax software is no longer optional for anyone with more than a handful of transactions. The three major platforms — CoinTracker, Koinly, and CoinLedger — all support 1099-DA reconciliation, but their capabilities differ in important ways.

FeatureCoinTrackerKoinlyCoinLedger
1099-DA ImportYes (direct Coinbase sync)Yes (CSV upload)Yes (CSV upload)
Cross-Platform Basis MatchingAutomatic transfer detectionAutomatic transfer detectionManual tagging
Accounting MethodsFIFO, LIFO, HIFO, ACBFIFO, LIFO, HIFO, ACBFIFO, LIFO, HIFO
Form 8949 GenerationYesYesYes
Schedule D GenerationYesYesYes
TurboTax IntegrationYesYesYes
DeFi / DEX SupportExtensiveExtensiveGood
NFT SupportYesYesYes
Tax-Loss Harvesting DashboardReal-timeYes (manual refresh)Basic
Pricing (up to 1,000 txns)$59/year$49/year$49/year

All three platforms generate IRS-ready Form 8949, but none of them generate Form 4684 (for theft losses) or Form 4797 (for abandonment). If you need to report stolen or worthless crypto, see our Bybit Hack 1-Year Tax Guide.

For the 2026 filing season specifically, the most important feature is cross-platform basis matching. If you transferred BTC from Kraken to Coinbase before selling, CoinTracker and Koinly can automatically detect the transfer and carry over the original cost basis. CoinLedger requires manual tagging but is $10 cheaper per year.

Full Review: Best Crypto Tax Software →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Form 1099-DA and why did I receive one in 2026?
Form 1099-DA (Digital Asset Proceeds from Broker Transactions) is a new IRS form that crypto exchanges like Coinbase, Kraken, and Robinhood are required to issue beginning with tax year 2025. It reports gross proceeds from your crypto sales and exchanges directly to both you and the IRS. For 2025 transactions, brokers report gross proceeds only — cost basis reporting begins with 2026 transactions.
Why is cost basis missing on my 1099-DA?
For the 2025 tax year, brokers are not required to report cost basis on Form 1099-DA. Additionally, if you transferred crypto from a personal wallet or another exchange, the receiving platform has no record of your original purchase price. This creates a "basis gap" where the IRS may assume your cost basis is $0, making your entire sale appear as taxable gain. You must provide the correct basis on Form 8949.
Does the wash sale rule apply to crypto in 2026?
No. As of February 2026, the IRS wash sale rule under IRC §1091 applies only to stocks and securities. Cryptocurrency is classified as property, not a security, so the 30-day wash sale restriction does not apply. You can sell crypto at a loss and immediately re-purchase the same asset. However, legislative proposals exist that could change this — Forbes reported 2025 may have been the last year without a crypto wash sale rule.
How much crypto loss can I deduct per year?
Capital losses from crypto first offset your capital gains dollar-for-dollar with no limit. Any remaining net capital loss can offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year ($1,500 if married filing separately). Excess losses carry forward indefinitely to future tax years. There is no expiration on the carryforward.
What happens if I miss the April 15, 2026 deadline?
If you owe taxes and fail to file by April 15, 2026 without an extension, the IRS charges a failure-to-file penalty of 5% of unpaid taxes per month, capped at 25%. There is also a separate failure-to-pay penalty of 0.5% per month. Filing Form 4868 by April 15 gives you an automatic six-month extension to October 15, 2026, but you must still estimate and pay any taxes owed by April 15 to avoid the payment penalty.
Should I use FIFO, LIFO, or HIFO for my crypto cost basis?
FIFO (First In, First Out) is the IRS default method. LIFO (Last In, First Out) and HIFO (Highest In, First Out) may reduce your taxable gain if your most recent or highest-cost purchases are sold first. You must choose a method and apply it consistently across all your crypto transactions. Starting with 2026 transactions, brokers will default to FIFO for covered securities unless you provide specific lot identification instructions. Consult a CPA before switching methods.
Can crypto losses offset my stock gains?
Yes. The IRS treats all capital gains and losses together on Schedule D, regardless of asset class. A $10,000 crypto loss can offset a $10,000 stock gain, reducing your net capital gain to zero. This is one of the most powerful advantages of tax-loss harvesting during a crypto downturn.
What is a CP2000 notice and how does it relate to Form 1099-DA?
A CP2000 notice is an IRS automated underreporter notice triggered when the information on your tax return does not match the data reported by third parties. If your exchange reports $45,000 in gross proceeds on Form 1099-DA and you fail to include the transaction on Form 8949, the IRS will assume the full $45,000 is taxable gain and send you a CP2000 proposing additional tax, interest, and potential penalties.
How do I file a tax extension for crypto using Form 4868?
You can file Form 4868 electronically through IRS Free File, through your tax software (TurboTax, H&R Block), or by mailing the paper form. The deadline to submit is April 15, 2026. An approved extension moves your filing deadline to October 15, 2026. Important: an extension to file is NOT an extension to pay — estimate your tax liability and pay it by April 15 to avoid the 0.5% monthly late-payment penalty.
What is the standard deduction for 2026 and does it affect my crypto losses?
For tax year 2026, the standard deduction is $16,100 for single filers and $32,200 for married filing jointly (adjusted under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act). Capital losses from crypto are reported on Form 8949 and Schedule D regardless of whether you itemize or take the standard deduction — you do NOT need to itemize to claim capital losses. However, theft losses reported on Form 4684 do require itemizing on Schedule A.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax laws are complex, change frequently, and vary by jurisdiction. The information presented reflects rules and guidance available as of February 24, 2026. Consult a qualified CPA, tax attorney, or enrolled agent before making any decisions based on this content. Legal Money Talk and its authors are not liable for actions taken based on this article. All external links are provided for reference only and do not constitute endorsements.

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