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2025-10-10

Pricing

  • Hobbyist: $49 (100 transactions) 
  • Investor: $99 (1,000 transactions) 
  • Pro: $199+ (3,000+ transactions)

Is there a free version?

Yes, CoinLedger offers a free version with portfolio tracking and unlimited transactions. To gain access to any reports, you’ll need to upgrade to a paid plan.

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Unlimited transaction plan available for high-volume investors. 
  • Known for its NFT support, including an integration for OpenSea. 
  • International tax reporting, with over 40 countries supported.

Cons

  • Doesn’t accept crypto as payment. 
  • Doesn’t offer specialized tax forms such as Schedule D.

Pricing

DIY Plans

  • Silver: $49 (100 transactions) 
  • Gold: $199 (5,000 transactions) 
  • Platinum: $399 (15,000 transactions)

Professional Consultation Plans

  • Premium Support Consultation: $275 (60 mins)
  • Tax Pro Prepared (single year): $2800
  • Tax Pro Prepared (multi-year): $5200

Is there a free version?

Yes, you can import your crypto transactions for free. However, to view, download, or access reports, you need to upgrade to a paid plan.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Integrates with tax platform TurboTax.
  • Offers professional tax consultations and services.
  • Offers a 14-day money-back guarantee/refund for all plans.

Cons

  • Doesn’t accept crypto as payment. 
  • High cost. If you have more than 100 transactions, you’ll need to pay $199.
  • Limited customer support. Some customers have reported issues with long wait times and a lack of helpful responses. 

Pricing

  • Newbie: $49 (100 transactions) 
  • Hodler: $99 (1,000 transactions)
  • Trader: $199 (3,000 transactions)
  • Pro: From $299 (10,000+ transactions)

Is there a free version?

Yes. Koinly provides a limited free version that allows you to track your portfolios. For access to any reports, you’ll need to upgrade to a paid plan.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Accepts crypto as payment, in addition to credit/debit card payments.
  • Provides an income overview, so you can see how much crypto you’ve earned from all your activities. 
  • Supports more complex crypto transactions like DeFi, NFT, and margin trading.

Cons

  • Limited security features. Compared to other crypto tax software, Koinly only mentions one layer of security – SSL.
  • Higher cost. Compared to other platforms, especially if you’re a high-volume trader. 
  • Usability. Some customers have reported potential syncing and labelling issues within the platform, while others said it wasn’t easy to navigate.

Pricing

  • Basic: $65 (100 transactions)
  • Premium: $199 (5,000 transactions)
  • Pro: $1,999 (20,000 transactions)
  • VIP: $3,499 (up to 30,000 CEX transactions)

Is there a free version?

No free version available. 

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Customer service. Live chat support is offered for every pricing tier.
  • Tax-loss harvesting. Offered for premium customers paying $199.
  • Multiple payment options. Accepts card or crypto payments. 

Cons

  • TokenTax costs a lot more than other crypto tax platforms. If you have over 100 transactions, you’ll have to pay at least $199. 
  • No refunds or money-back guarantee. 
  • No free version available.

Pricing

  • Rookie: $49 (up to 100 transactions)
  • Hobbyist: $99 (up to 1,000 transactions)
  • Investor: $249 (up to 10,000 transactions)
  • Trader: $499 (up to 100,000 transactions)
  • Advanced Trader: $999 (up to 200,000 transactions)

Summ also offers a 30-day, 100% money-back guarantee. If you’re not satisfied, you can receive a full refund by contacting the support team. 

Is there a free version?

Yes, Summ is free to use instantly when you sign up, allowing you to gain a full picture of your crypto portfolio, with support for up to 100,000 transactions. Take advantage of the smart suggestion and auto-categorization engine, portfolio tracking, unlimited integrations, DeFi and NFT support. 

To access the reports, the tax loss harvesting tool and priority support, you will need to upgrade to the appropriate paid plan.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Tax platform partnerships. Users can file reports directly with TurboTax and TaxAct.
  • 30-day money-back guarantee. Much higher than most competitors, which typically only offer 14 days.
  • Low price. Its starter ‘Rookie’ plan is one of the cheapest ones out there.
  • Tax loss harvesting tool. By identifying assets to sell at a loss, you can reduce your overall tax bill available on the or Investor and Trader plans.
  • Dedicated customer support. 24/7 support, including email and live chat support with a real person available for all customers.
  • Portfolio tracking mobile app. Connect your Summ account with the iOS mobile app and get a detailed view of your portfolio with accurate PnL & tax calculations.
  • Support for 200,000+ transactions. Perfect for high-volume traders.
  • Unlimited report downloads each year. Under the one plan subscription price you can download unlimited reports each year, perfect for users who make adjustments or are filing for multiple years at once.

Cons

  • Doesn’t currently accept crypto as a form of payment.
  • Mobile app not available on iOS
  • The tax optimization algorithm is only available on Investor and Trader plans

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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Guides
Oct 10
,
 
2025
 - 
10
min read

Liquidity Pools and LP tokens – How to calculate your taxes

A guide to liquidity pools, LP tokens and how to report them on your taxes.

Key takeaways
  • Adding and removing assets to a liquidity pool is typically a taxable event.
  • The taxable event occurs because you exchange two or more assets for a liquidity pool token, which is similar to a trade for tax purposes.
  • Impermanent Loss (IL) means that the exact assets you deposited, may not be the exact assets your receive when you withdraw.
This tax guide is regularly updated: Last Update  
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Liquidity pools and LP tokens are the backbone of decentralized finance (DeFi).

They have enabled a whole host of innovative financial products.

Liquidity pools enable token swaps , borrowing and lending protocols, yield farming and aggregators, on-chain liquidity insurance and many other products.

But with this innovation introduces new complexity when calculating and reporting your crypto taxes to the IRS.

In this guide we explain how liquidity pools work, and how to calculate the associated taxes.

How are liquidity pools taxed?

The process of providing liquidity, and the resultant LP tokens and their properties are still a grey area in the US.

However, there is enough guidance to suggest how the IRS expects you to calculate and report liquidity pools on your taxes.

Here is one interpretation of how the IRS might expect you to report providing liquidity to a pool, that provides an LP token in return.

How to calculate your tax when depositing into a pool.

Depositing funds into the pool in return for an LP token will be treated like a trade.

This occurs because assets have been swapped for another, which triggers a taxable capital gains event.

So you will need to calculate the price of the assets when you first obtained them (ie, purchase price) and the price of the assets when you disposed of them (ie, deposited them into the pool).

Example

You purchased $300 worth of ETH and $500 worth of a stablecoin, USDC.

You then deposit that ETH and USDC into a liquidity pool (as liquidity pools are often made up of two or more assets).

At the time you deposit it, the value of the ETH has risen from $300 to $500.

So you report a capital gain of $200, as you have exchanged that ETH (and USDC) for a new asset, which is the LP token.

The LP token at this time is worth $1000, as you exchanged assets worth $1000 for it ($500 ETH and $500 USDC).

As you can see, even though you are just depositing into a liqudity pool and plan to get the assets back, you are being taxed as though you had sold them.

This also means that the $500 of ETH and $500 of USDC is no longer on your balance sheet, and has now been replaced with an LP token valued at $1000.

How to calculate your tax when depositing into a pool.

Applying the same logic as in the example above, withdrawing assets from a liquidity pool may be treated like a trade.

This is because you are exchanging your LP token for assets in the pool.

So you will need to calculate the value of the LP token at the time you recieved it, against the combined value of the tokens you withdraw from the pool, at the time you withdraw them.

Example

As in the example above, the LP token was worth $1000 at the time it was aquired, because you deposited $500 of ETH and $500 of USDC into the pool.

If during that time value of the assets in the pool changed, you wind up withdrawing more or less than you originally deposited.

So if the price of ETH fell, you may wind up withdrawing $400 of ETH and $500 of USDC instead.

In this case, you would report a loss of $100.

Another factor you need to consider when making a withdrawl is Impermanent Loss.

Impermanent Loss occurs when the balance of the assets in the pool changes, and means you may withdraw them in a different ratio to what you deposited. Eg, $300 of ETH and $700 of USDC.

How to report your rewards from a liquidity pool

For most investors, the main purpose of adding liquidity to a pool is to earn rewards.

Any rewards earned from a liquidity pool must be reported as income tax, rather than capital gains tax.

Example

You decide to exit a liquidity pool completely and exchange your LP token for assets in the pool.

In addition to the pool assets, you receive $50 of CAKE tokens as a reward (sometimes called liquidity mining).

You will need to report this as $50 of income.

If you sell those assets later, you must report that as a capital gain or loss.

How to report your liquidity pool tax

This is only one interpretation of the current tax guidance.

It is important that you discuss these transactions in-depth with your personal accountant so they can take into consideration your personal situation, your economic intent when using liquidity pools, and how these transactions may affect your tax obligations.

Alternatively, to save time and money on professional accounting fees, you may want to consider using specialised software like Summ (formerly Crypto Tax Calculator) which will handle the calculations for you, and provide an IRS-ready tax report.

You can then file this report directly with the IRS, or provide it to your account to review.

<h2 id="">Form 1099-DA and Liquidity Pools</h2>
<p id="">Some transactions related to liquidity pools will be reported to the IRS on Form 1099-DA starting in 2026.</p>
<p id="">When you provide liquidity through centralized platforms, your LP activities involving the disposal of an asset may now be reported to the IRS. These include:</p>
<ul id=""><li id="">Adding liquidity (disposing of tokens for LP tokens)</li>
<li id="">Removing liquidity (disposing of LP tokens for underlying assets)</li></ul>
<p id="">If you provide liquidity on a DeFi platform that does not report the IRS, then you will still need to establish the cost basis of any assets when you withdraw them from the pool, if you later sell those assets on a centralized exchange. This is so that you can calculate the net proceeds accurately, which will prevent you from overpaying tax or potentially triggering an audit due to mismatched records.</p>

What is a liquidity pool?

A liquidity pool is essentially a group of tokens or assets locked into a smart contract to enable decentralized token swaps, lending, borrowing, and other activities, all on-chain.

Each liquidity pool will have a specific composition of assets (usually 2-3 specific tokens) where the amount of Token A + Token B = 'LP AB', and liquidity providers must deposit equal proportions (in market value) of each token to enter the pool.

Liquidity pools form the backbone of decentralized exchanges (DEXes) such as Uniswap, Pancakeswap and Raydium.

Unlike a centralized exchange, DEXes do not use an order book to create the market price.

When you place a buy order on a centralized exchange, you choose the price you want to purchase the asset for, and when that order gets filled, there is a seller on the other side who placed an order and was happy to sell you the asset at the same price, your order gets filled.

Instead, automated market makers (AMMs) govern the liquidity pools in DeFi, and algorithmically balance the pools to determine the price.

Example:

Let's take a theoretical liquidity pool on Uniswap that consists of 100,000 ETH and 10,000 WBTC. This would be a ETH-WBTC Liquidity Pool (LP).

This gives an initial price ratio of 1 ETH : 0.1 WBTC. Let's say that the price of ETH on some major exchanges, such as Binance and Coinbase, starts to fall below this ratio, down to 1 ETH : 0.09WBTC.

There is now an arbitrage opportunity between the centralized exchanges and the Uniswap crypto liquidity pool.

ETH would be purchased from the centralized exchanges and sold to the pool for an immediate profit.

This selling would rebalance the liquidity pool, adding ETH and removing WBTC until an equilibrium is reached between the centralized exchange price and the decentralized liquidity pool price, meaning arbitrage would no longer be profitable.

In practice, this happens constantly and is why the price of assets is generally very similar to the prices on large exchanges.

Impermanent Loss

The problem that the constant rebalancing causes for crypto liquidity pools and liquidity providers is a concept called impermanent loss (IL).IL occurs when one of the assets in the pool appreciates against the other.

In the example above, where WBTC has appreciated against ETH, the liquidity providers of this pool have essentially lost some WBTC exposure as the arbitragers have removed WBTC from the pool and added ETH.

The loss is 'impermanent', as it may return to the same allocation of assets if the price returns to the same proportion as when the liquidity provider entered the liquidity pool.

To compensate liquidity providers for taking the risk of IL, traders who make trades using the liquidity pool must pay a trade fee, which gets allocated to the liquidity providers. The more trades that get made, the higher the return is in % terms for liquidity providers.

The Process of Providing Liquidity

If you have decided you want to participate in this innovative new financial product, and take the risk of impermanent loss in exchange for the chance of returns from trading fees, you will have to go through the process of providing liquidity.

The first step is to decide what pool you want to join. This will mainly be factored by what tokens you own, and are willing to give liquidity pool tokens for a return. Examples of popular liquidity pools are: ETH/USDC, ETH/WBTC, ETH/DAI etc.

The second step is to decide what platform you want to trust with your tokens. Certain platforms are more battle-tested than others, and have possibly had their code audited for bugs or flaws.

Some liquidity pools may have incentive schemes to entice you to join the liquidity pool, especially if the pool is new. It is important to note that your funds are only as safe as the contract you deposit them into.

Note: Brand new protocols will generally be more risky than larger, well-known, audited ones! However, there is a risk with any DeFi protocol, so think carefully before deciding to join a LP.

The third step is to provide the liquidity using your web3 wallet, such as MetaMask. The pool will require you to deposit set proportions of each token at the time of deposit, e.g. 1 ETH : 5000 USDC for the ETH/USDC Uniswap liquidity pool.

In return, you receive a proportional amount of LP tokens associated to that liquidity pool. These tokens represent your stake of the pool.

The last step is when you want to redeem your LP token, and withdraw your funds from the pool. In the redeeming process, you essentially exchange the LP token back to the liquidity pool in return for your stake (plus your share of the fees that were generated over that time period).

If no impermanent loss has occurred, you will walk away with the same amount of each token as you deposited. If there has been some IL, you may receive different proportions of the tokens you first deposited.

Categorizing Liquidity Pools in Summ

From the guidelines we have received, our platform categorizes this initial deposit into the liquidity pool tokens as a 'Add Liquidity'. The receipt of the liquidity pool (LP) token is categorized as a 'Receive LP Token'.

This creates a taxable event on our platform, where you may realise capital gains from the 'Add Liquidity' of the deposited tokens, as some tax jurisdictions treat this as a capital disposal event.

This can be seen in the example below, where pxGMX and ETH digital assets have been deposited into a liquidity pool on Arbitrum's Camelot DEX:

Embedded Image

You can see the deposit of each asset, pxGMX and ETH, digital assets have been categorized as 'Add Liquidity' and have an associated capital gain/loss.

This is then immediately followed by the receipt of the  Camelot LP token, which is assigned a value equal to the value of the two deposited tokens. As there is a fee for this transaction, a small capital loss is associated on the right.

The redemption of the LP token works in the reverse process, with the LP token being categorized as a 'Send LP Token' and the deposited tokens (plus generated fees/yield) being received being categorized as a 'Remove Liquidity’.

If the LP position has changed in value between the initial deposit and the final withdrawal, this will be classified as a taxable event depending on your tax jurisdiction.

This can be seen again in the example where pxGMX and ETH has been withdrawn from the same liquidity pool on Arbitrum's Camelot DEX:

Embedded Image

You can see the send of the Camelot LP token, which is assigned a value equal to the value of the two deposited tokens. This is then immediately followed by the withdrawal of each crypto asset, pxGMX and ETH.

The Summ platform has automatically categorized these as 'Remove Liquidity' and have an associated capital gain/loss.

As mentioned before, crypto liquidity deposits are a grey area in most tax jurisdictions. Summ uses the method outlined above, where each step of the liquidity provision is a taxable event. This ensures our users are best positioned for future clarification of these complex transactions. If this is to be clarified as a chain of taxable events in the future (as the platform accounts for) users will be positioned correctly in terms of their tax obligations. If we were to take the stance that this was not a chain of taxable events, and future clarification went against this assumption, many of our users would be impacted and have unfulfilled tax obligations.

Again, it is very important you clarify this process of events with your accountant to ensure your taxable obligations are fulfilled in your particular personal circumstance.

LP Token Value in Summ

As there are millions of different liquidity pools, each with their own unique LP token associated, and with their own unique pool characteristics, it is not always possible for us to assign a market value to your LP token at this point in time.

Each LP token will change value every single time a trade is executed in the liquidity pool, or when liquidity is added or removed, and thus, the proportion of the pool that the LP token represents is ever-changing.

This explains why it is currently difficult to assign a correct market value to your LP token. The LP token will be assigned the value of the deposited tokens at the time of deposit, and will only receive a new value at the time of withdrawal, equal to the value of the withdrawn tokens at that time.

This is how capital gains and losses are accounted for, but may result in incorrect 'holdings value' on the dashboard whilst you have this LP token in your possession..

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.

FAQ

Will my liquidity pool activities be reported on Form 1099-DA?

Yes, but only if you provide liquidity through centralized exchanges or custodial DeFi platforms. Your LP token transactions may be reported on Form 1099-DA as disposals when you add or remove liquidity.

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