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2026-04-02

How Investing vs Trading impacts tax

In most cases of buying and selling cryptocurrency as a retail investor, you are participating in investing rather than trading. The two are treated differently for tax purposes.

  • Investing is subject to capital gains tax or income tax, depending on the nature of the transaction.
  • Trading in this case refers to self-employment which is subject to income tax and National Insurance Contributions.

The key difference between investing and trading – along with the different tax treatments, is how losses generated in the crypto-activity can be used.

In their guidance, HMRC have explicitly stated that they would expect it to be exceedingly rare that any crypto-activity constituting buying & selling crypto would be classified as “trading”.

If you are uncertain, speak to a tax advisor as there are always exceptions, including but not limited to, developing tokens and large scale mining.

How is crypto tax calculated in the United States?

You can be liable for both capital gains and income tax depending on the type of cryptocurrency transaction, and your individual circumstances. For example, you might need to pay capital gains on profits from buying and selling cryptocurrency, or pay income tax on interest earned when holding crypto.

CoinLedger

CoinLedger is an accessible crypto tax platform with over 1,000 exchange and wallet integrations.

Best for: Users who want a simple, straightforward experience without complex DeFi needs.

Key differentiator: Offers an unlimited transaction plan for high-volume traders at a fixed price.

Pricing: $49 (100 transactions) to $499+ (10,000+ transactions).

Limitation: Does not generate Schedule D forms - you will need to complete this manually or with other software.

Notable: Strong NFT support with OpenSea integration.

CoinTracker

CoinTracker is a portfolio tracker and tax calculator supporting over 30,000 cryptocurrencies.

Best for: Users who prioritize portfolio tracking alongside tax reporting.

Key differentiator: Direct integrations with TurboTax and H&R Block Desktop.

Pricing: $59 (100 transactions) to $599 (10,000 transactions), with full-service options up to $3,499.

Limitation: Customer support is limited on lower-tier plans - priority support requires the $599 Ultra plan.

Notable: Good security with end-to-end encryption and SOC 2 compliance.

ZenLedger

ZenLedger offers both DIY crypto tax reports and professional full-service accounting.

Best for: Users who want tax loss harvesting included at every pricing tier.

Key differentiator: Tax loss harvesting is available on all plans, not just premium tiers.

Pricing: $49 (100 transactions) to $399 (15,000 transactions).

Limitation: Only offers 400+ exchange integrations - significantly fewer than competitors. Some users report customer support issues with long wait times.

Notable: TurboTax integration and 14-day refund policy.

blog
Apr 2
,
 
2026
 - 
10
min read

The Crypto Neobank You Need Isn't What You Think

Most crypto neobanks are custodied fintech in disguise. Here's what a real Bitcoin onchain neobank looks like, and why the difference matters to your tax position.

Key takeaways
This tax guide is regularly updated: Last Update  

The word "neobank" used to mean something specific: a digital-first bank with better UX, lower fees, and faster onboarding than the institution it was replacing. Revolut, Wise, N26. Clean apps. Global reach. No paperwork.

Then crypto arrived. And suddenly every exchange, every custodied wallet, every fintech app with a BTC buy button started calling itself a crypto neobank.

The problem? Most of them are just banks in different clothes. They hold your assets. They earn yield on your deposits. They can freeze your account and restrict your withdrawals on a bad quarter. You just happen to be depositing Bitcoin instead of dollars.

If you're using Summ to track your crypto tax position, you already understand what's at stake. Every onchain transaction has a cost basis. Every time a centralised platform moves your assets, you're dependent on their records, their solvency, and their goodwill. That's not a neobank. That's a counterparty risk problem with a better app icon.

Here's what a real crypto neobank looks like -- and why it's built differently.

What Is a Crypto Neobank?

A crypto neobank is a financial platform that gives you the utility of traditional banking -- earning yield, borrowing against assets, spending -- but built natively on crypto rails.

The core idea is straightforward: instead of selling your Bitcoin to cover a tax bill, a business expense, or a large purchase, you keep it. You borrow against it, earn yield on it, or spend a stablecoin funded by it. Your Bitcoin position stays intact. The government sees no sale. No taxable event. No forced liquidation at the worst possible moment.

The same logic applies to stablecoins. If you hold USDC, a crypto neobank should let you lend it into yield-generating pools -- earning organic market yield -- while keeping full control of when you withdraw. Idle stablecoins are a missed opportunity. The infrastructure to fix that is here.

For high-conviction Bitcoin holders, this matters enormously. The "buy, borrow, die" strategy that wealth managers have long applied to equities translates directly to Bitcoin -- accumulate, access liquidity through borrowing, never trigger capital gains. The infrastructure to execute this onchain is finally here.

But the execution varies wildly across platforms. And the distinction that matters most isn't the feature set. It's custody.

Custody Is the Whole Game

Most crypto neobanks are custodied. They hold your private keys. Your Bitcoin is on their balance sheet, not yours. When you "earn yield" on a custodied platform, you're lending your assets to that platform and hoping they pay you back. When you "borrow" against Bitcoin on a centralised exchange, you're pledging assets you don't technically control as collateral for a loan you can be margin called out of.

This isn't theoretical. Celsius, BlockFi, Voyager -- all of them were crypto neobanks of a sort. All of them froze withdrawals when things went sideways. Billions in customer funds locked. Counterparty risk made real.

Custodied platforms create a specific problem for tax-focused investors. When a platform fails, restructures, or moves your assets without your knowledge, the taxable event question gets genuinely murky. Who triggered it? When? At what price? The records are theirs, not yours. Good luck reconciling that with Summ's import when the platform's API goes dark.

The card-first model adds another layer to this problem. A crop of newer "crypto neobanks" have built their entire product around a spending card, but buried in their terms is a clause that should stop anyone cold: when you top up the card, you're not depositing crypto -- you're selling it to the platform. Your assets become their corporate treasury. What you hold is a ledger entry, not a legal claim. Add offshore incorporation, a liability cap measured in hundreds of dollars, and mandatory arbitration clauses in jurisdictions most users have never visited, and you have exactly the kind of infrastructure that looks like a neobank until the day it doesn't.

Self-custody changes the whole equation. If you hold your own keys, every transaction is yours. Verifiable onchain. Clean records. No third-party data dependency.

Why "Onchain" Doesn't Mean Non-Custodied

Here's where it gets more nuanced. Some crypto neobanks are building on Layer 2 networks -- Stacks, Starknet, Lightning -- and marketing themselves as onchain. And technically they might be. But onchain doesn't automatically mean self-custodied.

A platform can hold your Bitcoin on Layer 1 while issuing you L2 tokens that represent your position. The transaction is onchain. The custody is still theirs. The legal risk, the counterparty risk, and the record-keeping problem all remain.

What you want is a platform where you hold the keys at every step. Where smart contract interactions happen under your wallet's signature, not a platform custodian's. Where you can exit at any time, without requesting permission from a support team.

That distinction -- self-custodied onchain utility versus custodied onchain exposure -- is the difference between a crypto neobank and a Bitcoin neobank.

What a True Bitcoin Onchain Neobank Looks Like

Xverse is built as a self-custodial Bitcoin neobank. "Swiss bank meets Swiss army knife" is how the team frames it: the security model of a vault with the utility of a full financial operating system.

The product is built around four pillars:

Earn. Native yield on Bitcoin and USDC, directly from the wallet. Lend USDC into curated Vesu pools on Starknet and earn organic market yield -- no dApp browser, no manual pool selection, no protocol navigation required. Xverse selects the pool, surfaces the APY, and handles the transaction. You hold the keys. Yield accrues to your position. Withdraw at any time. No permission required, no counterparty to trust.

Borrow. BTC-backed stablecoin loans. You keep your Bitcoin. You access liquidity. The loan is collateralised against your own keys, not surrendered to a platform balance sheet. No forced sale, no taxable event.

Spend. The Xverse Card lets you spend stablecoins or draw against your Bitcoin balance at the point of sale. Your Bitcoin stack stays untouched. No liquidation, no realised gains.

Swap. In-app token swaps across Bitcoin L1 and L2s. One interface, multiple chains, all from a vault you control.

This is the difference from custodied crypto neobanks. The utility is genuine, but so is the self-custody. You're not handing your Bitcoin to a platform and hoping they give it back. You're using your Bitcoin from your own vault -- on your terms.

For Summ users, this matters at tax time. Every Xverse transaction is signed by your keys and traceable onchain. No third-party records to request. No platform to subpoena. Just your wallet's history, clean and importable.

The Numbers That Make This Matter

Over $152 billion sits in Bitcoin ETFs. None of those holders can earn yield, borrow, or spend without selling. Exchange balances are at 11-year lows. The market is moving onchain.

Bitcoin DeFi TVL has grown over 1,200% year-over-year. The infrastructure to actually live on Bitcoin -- without selling it, without trusting a custodian, without giving up keys -- is maturing fast. Self-custodial platforms are where that infrastructure lives.

The high-conviction Bitcoin holders who understand the tax game are already asking the right question: not "how do I buy more Bitcoin" but "how do I make my existing Bitcoin work for me without selling it?"

The answer isn't a better exchange. It isn't a custodied yield product with a slick mobile UI. It's a self-custodial Bitcoin neobank where you are always the owner.

About Summ

Summ is a crypto tax platform built for serious investors. It tracks your onchain transactions, calculates your tax position, and gives you the reports you need to file accurately -- no matter how complex your portfolio gets. Learn more at summ.com.

About Xverse

Xverse is the self-custodial Bitcoin neobank. Xverse is available on iOS, Android, and Chrome. Earn yield, borrow against Bitcoin, and spend with the Xverse Card -- all without giving up your keys. 

Your Bitcoin. Your vault. Your keys. That's the only crypto neobank worth using.

Xverse users get 20% off their first year with Summ.

The information provided on this website is general in nature and is not tax, accounting or legal advice. It has been prepared without taking into account your objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on this information, you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your own objectives, financial situation and needs and seek professional advice. Summ (formerly Crypto Tax Calculator) disclaims all and any guarantees, undertakings and warranties, expressed or implied, and is not liable for any loss or damage whatsoever (including human or computer error, negligent or otherwise, or incidental or Consequential Loss or damage) arising out of, or in connection with, any use or reliance on the information or advice in this website. The user must accept sole responsibility associated with the use of the material on this site, irrespective of the purpose for which such use or results are applied. The information in this website is no substitute for specialist advice.

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The Crypto Neobank You Need Isn't What You Think

Most crypto neobanks are custodied fintech in disguise. Here's what a real Bitcoin onchain neobank looks like, and why the difference matters to your tax position.

Team Summ

This tax guide is regularly updated: Last Update 

....

April

2

2026

The word "neobank" used to mean something specific: a digital-first bank with better UX, lower fees, and faster onboarding than the institution it was replacing. Revolut, Wise, N26. Clean apps. Global reach. No paperwork.

Then crypto arrived. And suddenly every exchange, every custodied wallet, every fintech app with a BTC buy button started calling itself a crypto neobank.

The problem? Most of them are just banks in different clothes. They hold your assets. They earn yield on your deposits. They can freeze your account and restrict your withdrawals on a bad quarter. You just happen to be depositing Bitcoin instead of dollars.

If you're using Summ to track your crypto tax position, you already understand what's at stake. Every onchain transaction has a cost basis. Every time a centralised platform moves your assets, you're dependent on their records, their solvency, and their goodwill. That's not a neobank. That's a counterparty risk problem with a better app icon.

Here's what a real crypto neobank looks like -- and why it's built differently.

What Is a Crypto Neobank?

A crypto neobank is a financial platform that gives you the utility of traditional banking -- earning yield, borrowing against assets, spending -- but built natively on crypto rails.

The core idea is straightforward: instead of selling your Bitcoin to cover a tax bill, a business expense, or a large purchase, you keep it. You borrow against it, earn yield on it, or spend a stablecoin funded by it. Your Bitcoin position stays intact. The government sees no sale. No taxable event. No forced liquidation at the worst possible moment.

The same logic applies to stablecoins. If you hold USDC, a crypto neobank should let you lend it into yield-generating pools -- earning organic market yield -- while keeping full control of when you withdraw. Idle stablecoins are a missed opportunity. The infrastructure to fix that is here.

For high-conviction Bitcoin holders, this matters enormously. The "buy, borrow, die" strategy that wealth managers have long applied to equities translates directly to Bitcoin -- accumulate, access liquidity through borrowing, never trigger capital gains. The infrastructure to execute this onchain is finally here.

But the execution varies wildly across platforms. And the distinction that matters most isn't the feature set. It's custody.

Custody Is the Whole Game

Most crypto neobanks are custodied. They hold your private keys. Your Bitcoin is on their balance sheet, not yours. When you "earn yield" on a custodied platform, you're lending your assets to that platform and hoping they pay you back. When you "borrow" against Bitcoin on a centralised exchange, you're pledging assets you don't technically control as collateral for a loan you can be margin called out of.

This isn't theoretical. Celsius, BlockFi, Voyager -- all of them were crypto neobanks of a sort. All of them froze withdrawals when things went sideways. Billions in customer funds locked. Counterparty risk made real.

Custodied platforms create a specific problem for tax-focused investors. When a platform fails, restructures, or moves your assets without your knowledge, the taxable event question gets genuinely murky. Who triggered it? When? At what price? The records are theirs, not yours. Good luck reconciling that with Summ's import when the platform's API goes dark.

The card-first model adds another layer to this problem. A crop of newer "crypto neobanks" have built their entire product around a spending card, but buried in their terms is a clause that should stop anyone cold: when you top up the card, you're not depositing crypto -- you're selling it to the platform. Your assets become their corporate treasury. What you hold is a ledger entry, not a legal claim. Add offshore incorporation, a liability cap measured in hundreds of dollars, and mandatory arbitration clauses in jurisdictions most users have never visited, and you have exactly the kind of infrastructure that looks like a neobank until the day it doesn't.

Self-custody changes the whole equation. If you hold your own keys, every transaction is yours. Verifiable onchain. Clean records. No third-party data dependency.

Why "Onchain" Doesn't Mean Non-Custodied

Here's where it gets more nuanced. Some crypto neobanks are building on Layer 2 networks -- Stacks, Starknet, Lightning -- and marketing themselves as onchain. And technically they might be. But onchain doesn't automatically mean self-custodied.

A platform can hold your Bitcoin on Layer 1 while issuing you L2 tokens that represent your position. The transaction is onchain. The custody is still theirs. The legal risk, the counterparty risk, and the record-keeping problem all remain.

What you want is a platform where you hold the keys at every step. Where smart contract interactions happen under your wallet's signature, not a platform custodian's. Where you can exit at any time, without requesting permission from a support team.

That distinction -- self-custodied onchain utility versus custodied onchain exposure -- is the difference between a crypto neobank and a Bitcoin neobank.

What a True Bitcoin Onchain Neobank Looks Like

Xverse is built as a self-custodial Bitcoin neobank. "Swiss bank meets Swiss army knife" is how the team frames it: the security model of a vault with the utility of a full financial operating system.

The product is built around four pillars:

Earn. Native yield on Bitcoin and USDC, directly from the wallet. Lend USDC into curated Vesu pools on Starknet and earn organic market yield -- no dApp browser, no manual pool selection, no protocol navigation required. Xverse selects the pool, surfaces the APY, and handles the transaction. You hold the keys. Yield accrues to your position. Withdraw at any time. No permission required, no counterparty to trust.

Borrow. BTC-backed stablecoin loans. You keep your Bitcoin. You access liquidity. The loan is collateralised against your own keys, not surrendered to a platform balance sheet. No forced sale, no taxable event.

Spend. The Xverse Card lets you spend stablecoins or draw against your Bitcoin balance at the point of sale. Your Bitcoin stack stays untouched. No liquidation, no realised gains.

Swap. In-app token swaps across Bitcoin L1 and L2s. One interface, multiple chains, all from a vault you control.

This is the difference from custodied crypto neobanks. The utility is genuine, but so is the self-custody. You're not handing your Bitcoin to a platform and hoping they give it back. You're using your Bitcoin from your own vault -- on your terms.

For Summ users, this matters at tax time. Every Xverse transaction is signed by your keys and traceable onchain. No third-party records to request. No platform to subpoena. Just your wallet's history, clean and importable.

The Numbers That Make This Matter

Over $152 billion sits in Bitcoin ETFs. None of those holders can earn yield, borrow, or spend without selling. Exchange balances are at 11-year lows. The market is moving onchain.

Bitcoin DeFi TVL has grown over 1,200% year-over-year. The infrastructure to actually live on Bitcoin -- without selling it, without trusting a custodian, without giving up keys -- is maturing fast. Self-custodial platforms are where that infrastructure lives.

The high-conviction Bitcoin holders who understand the tax game are already asking the right question: not "how do I buy more Bitcoin" but "how do I make my existing Bitcoin work for me without selling it?"

The answer isn't a better exchange. It isn't a custodied yield product with a slick mobile UI. It's a self-custodial Bitcoin neobank where you are always the owner.

About Summ

Summ is a crypto tax platform built for serious investors. It tracks your onchain transactions, calculates your tax position, and gives you the reports you need to file accurately -- no matter how complex your portfolio gets. Learn more at summ.com.

About Xverse

Xverse is the self-custodial Bitcoin neobank. Xverse is available on iOS, Android, and Chrome. Earn yield, borrow against Bitcoin, and spend with the Xverse Card -- all without giving up your keys. 

Your Bitcoin. Your vault. Your keys. That's the only crypto neobank worth using.

Xverse users get 20% off their first year with Summ.

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Foire aux questions

Les transactions "cryptos à cryptos" sont-elles imposables ?

Les transactions "crypto à crypto" ne sont pas imposables ; le fait générateur est la cession de l’actif numérique ayant pour contrepartie: 1.Une monnaie ayant un cours légal dit FIAT (Dollars, Euro, Ariary,); 2.L’achat d’un bien ou d’un service (exemple : paiement d’une consultation fiscale en actif numérique).

Quelle fiscalité pour les airdrops ?

La manière dont les cryptomonnaies sont imposées dans la plupart des pays signifie que les investisseurs peuvent toujours être tenus de payer des impôts, qu'ils aient réalisé un bénéfice ou subi une perte globale. En fonction de votre situation, les impôts sont généralement réalisés au moment de la transaction, et non sur la position globale à la fin de l'exercice financier.

Automate your crypto bookkeeping

01

SOC 2 type 2 certified

As SOC 2 Type 2 compliant, we ensure robust data security, giving customers confidence in entrusting us.
02

Secure organization

We conduct regular and thorough Security & Awareness training for all employees.
03

Full data privacy

Our application only ever requires 'read-only' access to your data.