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2023-03-31

Yield farming or DeFi interest

Earnings from yield farming or lending crypto in DeFi platforms are taxed as income at the time they are received. However, depositing into and withdrawing from a liquidity pool may be treated as a disposal, which is a capital gains event.

  • Example: Earning £500 in interest from a DeFi platform is subject to Income Tax.

Payments for goods or services

Receiving cryptocurrency as payment for goods or services is treated as income at its market value when received. There are instances where the “value” of the work will be taxed instead of the value of the crypto received. Professional advice should be taken if you are unsure.

  • Example: If you're paid 0.2 BTC for freelance work worth £6,000, this amount is subject to Income Tax.

Receiving airdrops

If you actively participate to receive an airdrop (e.g., completing tasks), the tokens are treated as income at their market value upon receipt.

  • Example: Earning £100 in tokens from an airdrop after completing tasks is subject to Income Tax.

Mining rewards

Mining rewards are taxed as income. Those undertaking mining activities to an extent to which they are operating a business will be subject to additional tax obligations.

  • Example: Earning 0.5 BTC through mining worth £10,000 at the time of receipt is subject to Income Tax.

Staking rewards

Cryptocurrency earned through staking is considered income at the market value at the time of receipt.

  • Example: If you earn 0.1 ETH through staking worth £200, this amount is subject to Income Tax.

Providing liquidity

Adding liquidity: If adding assets to a liquidity pool results in a change of ownership or creates a new token (e.g., LP tokens), it may be considered a taxable disposal, with CGT applying to any gains. The answer to this can usually be found within the terms and conditions of the protocol.

Removing liquidity: Removing assets from a liquidity pool may also be a disposal, potentially triggering CGT based on the gain or loss relative to the cost basis.

Liquidity pool rewards are generally treated as taxable income upon receipt, subject to Income Tax.

Selling airdropped tokens

Selling tokens received through an airdrop is a taxable disposal.

Tokens received without any action (eg, unsolicited distributions) are not taxed as income upon receipt. Instead, they are subject to Capital Gains Tax (CGT) when sold, with the cost basis typically being zero or the fair market value at the time of receipt if explicitly stated by HMRC.

Tokens earned through performing tasks (eg, completing activities) are taxed as income at the market value in GBP upon receipt. When sold, the gain or loss is subject to CGT, calculated using the market value at receipt as the cost basis.

  • Example: You perform a series of tasks to qualify for an airdrop. You then sell that airdropped token for £500 and it has a cost basis of £200. The £200 cost basis would have been subject to income tax in the tax year in which it was received and the £300 gain is subject to CGT in the tax year in which the token is sold.

Selling NFTs

Disposing of NFTs is treated similarly to crypto disposals, with gains subject to CGT.

  • Example: If you bought an NFT for £1,000 and sold it for £3,000, the £2,000 profit is taxable.

Gifting cryptocurrency (excluding spouse or civil partner)

Gifting crypto to someone triggers CGT based on the market value at the time of the gift. Gifting to registered charities or your spouse or civil partner does not trigger a taxable event. Here, we have often seen individuals gifting tokens to others but keeping them in their own wallet. If this is the case, it is very important to document the gift. Consider speaking to a tax advisor if you are uncertain of your position.

  • Example: Giving 1 ETH to a friend worth £2,000 incurs CGT on any gains above its cost basis.

Using crypto to purchase goods or services

Spending cryptocurrency on goods or services is considered a disposal.

  • Example: Paying 0.5 BTC for a laptop is a taxable event. If the BTC had a cost basis of £5,000 but was worth £10,000 at the time of the transaction, the £5,000 gain is subject to CGT.

Crypto-to-crypto trades (swaps)

Exchanging one cryptocurrency for another (e.g., BTC for ETH) is treated as a disposal for tax purposes.

  • Example: Swapping BTC worth £5,000 for ETH creates a taxable event, with any profit based on the cost basis of your Bitcoin. The value of the BTC when swapping will be the proceeds and will also become the cost of the ETH that has been obtained.

Selling crypto for GBP

Any profit made when you sell crypto for fiat currency (e.g., GBP) is a taxable event.

  • Example: If you bought BTC for £10,000 and sold it for £15,000, you have a taxable gain of £5,000.

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.

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Crypto 101
31
 
Mar
 
2023
 - 
10
min read

How to use a blockchain explorer

Struggling to understand what a blockchain explorer is and how to use one? We break it down for you in this blog.

Key takeaways
This tax guide is regularly updated: Last Update  
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What is a blockchain explorer?

So you’ve been in the world of crypto for a little while now, and you’re excited by all the opportunities it presents. You know of this digital ledger each blockchain consists of, and maybe you even understand how this digital ledger works to facilitate decentralized, accurate, speedy transactions - but how do you actually view these transactions? If everything’s recorded on the blockchain, where can you access all this data? Enter: blockchain explorers.

A blockchain explorer (or block explorer) allows users to access details related to transactions on specific blockchains and wallet addresses; including amounts transacted, sources and destinations of funds, and the status of the transactions themselves. It basically provides a window into the specific blockchain world you’re looking into, so you can observe and track what’s happening within it.

How do blockchain explorers work?

A blockchain explorer works by drawing data from the blockchain via a node and translating it into a searchable format. Usually, each blockchain explorer will be focused on a particular blockchain (e.g. Etherscan for Ethereum, Blockstream for Bitcoin, SnowTrace for Avalanche, and more). An explorer works with the node on the blockchain to extract all the relevant data from the latest blocks and transactions and sends them to their web service. After this point, the data is compiled and formatted into a more easily searchable format. This may take the form of searchable tables, charts, volume analysis and more.

How can I use a blockchain explorer?

Let’s use Etherscan to explain the basic concepts to learn when using a block explorer. For context, most block explorers share a lot of the same formatting, so you should be able to apply these learnings more widely.

Etherscan is a blockchain explorer for the Ethereum network and allows you to search through transactions, blocks, wallet addresses, smart contracts and more. To use Etherscan, you’ll need either a wallet address, transaction ID or smart contract address to search. Depending on what identifier you use to search will determine what information you see as a result, but it will include things like associated transactions, timestamps and value amounts.

Let’s say you’re sending ETH from your Coinbase account to your MetaMask wallet. If this is done on the Ethereum mainnet, you’ll be able to use Etherscan to track this transaction.

  • Wallet addresses: You can track this transaction on Etherscan using either your Coinbase wallet address or your MetaMask wallet address. If you use your Coinbase wallet address to search in Etherscan, you should see an outgoing transaction ‘from’ your Coinbase wallet address and ‘to’ your MetaMask wallet address (see below for an example).

  • You could also find this same information by searching the specific transaction hash generated upon confirming the transfer in Coinbase. You will be provided with a tx hash that you can copy and paste into Etherscan to track the transfer’s progress.

Blockchain explorers and taxes

As previously stated, a blockchain explorer allows users to access details related to transactions on specific blockchains and/or wallet addresses. This is very important when it comes to staying tax compliant. In order to ascertain where a particular transaction’s value originated, if it was a buy, if it was a sell, if it was a transfer; you’ll need to become very familiar with blockchain explorers.

While you can use these to help you track everything from cost bases to transaction fee amounts, you can imagine how time-consuming this process would become after anything more than 10 transactions… That’s where Summ (formerly Crypto Tax Calculator) comes in! Where possible, our software pulls in the same data as blockchain explorers to facilitate the tracking for you. All possible transactions will be pulled into the app and categorized accordingly, and you should only need to use a block explorer for any uncategorized transactions. When and if you do need to use a block explorer throughout your Summ experience, you can use the above steps to help guide you!

UK Tax Guide
Unsure about your crypto tax obligations? This comprehensive guide helps you understand and file your crypto taxes in The UK.
DeFi Tax Guide
Have you been dabbling with DeFi? This in-depth guide breaks down the details of DeFi taxes so you can file with confidence.
NFT Tax Guide
Tried your hand at NFT trading? This complete guide that breaks down the details of NFT taxes so you can file with confidence.
Understanding the different tax reports available
Managing and inviting clients
Ways of working with clients: Full service, collaboration, and self-service
Using different inventory methods

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. Cryptotaxcalculator 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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