US Treasury Unveils DeFi Broker Tax Reporting Rule, Here Are Key Highlights
Highlights
- US Treasury has released its controversial DeFi Tax framework
- Market experts are against the rules and calling for a repeal
- Eyes now rests on President-elect Donald Trump per his pro-crypto promises
The US Treasury Deaprtment has finally released the long-awaited DeFi broker tax reporting framework in its bid to capture revenue from the growing industry. According to the released framework, platforms offering trading services to report user transactions with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
DeFi Broker Tax Framework: Highlights and Criticism
According to the summary from ConsenSys lawyer Bill Hughes, the reporting requirements from the trading frontend will apply to both US persons and non-US persons. Compliance with the DeFi broker tax reporting framework will commence in 2027.
When compliance commences, the IRS will require DeFi brokers to send Form 1099 to platforms users for tax reporting pursposes. Ideally, Decentralized Finance (DeFi) protocols, per current operational model are non custodial. This means that user’s biometric information are not kept, alongside with the user’s funds.
With the new reporting framework, this may have to charge in a bid to comply with the DeFi broker tax provisions. In addition to the name and transaction details, market experts believe the new reporting standard might require protocols to include addresses and other sensitive details.
These conditions have drawn uproar from members of the crypto community. Hughes noted that this framework will be accompanied by a lawsuit. This is possibly in demand for its rollback. The legal expert noted that the tax provisions will impact all asset types including NFTs and stablecoins.
Treasury/IRS has finalized their DeFi broker tax reporting rule. Trading front ends would have to track and report on user activity – both US persons and non-US persons- starting in 2027. And it applies to the sale of every single digital asset – including NFTs and even… pic.twitter.com/CtFox668yn
— Bill Hughes : wchughes.eth 🦊 (@BillHughesDC) December 27, 2024
Hughes noted that the US Treasury had completed the DeFi broker tax rules long ago but chose to release it just weeks to the end of the current administration.
Will Donald Trump Roll Back the US Treasury Rules?
The crypto industry started weighing the impact of the tax reporting rules long ago. With the framework now official, the hopes now lie on the incoming Donald Trump administration to change the terms.
The hopes in Donald Trump hinges on the nomination of Scott Bessent as the Treasury Secretary. Unlike Janet Yellen, Scott Bessent is pro-crypto and might consider the plight of industry advocates. Beyond the invasion of privacy, experts say the DeFi broker tax rules is all cost-focused with no positive impact on revenue generation.
The President-elect’s family also pioneered a DeFi outfit, World Liberty Financial, this year. If this framework starts, the outfit might also need to comply, a twist that might encourage some forms of rollbacks or changes to the rules.
- Breaking: U.S. CPI Inflation Falls To 4-Year Low Of 2.4%, Bitcoin Rises
- Bitget Launches Gracy AI For Market Insights Amid Crypto Platforms Push For AI Integration
- BlackRock Signals $257M Bitcoin and Ethereum Sell-Off Ahead of Partial U.S. Government Shutdown
- XRP News: Jane Street Emerges Among Key Institutions Driving XRP ETF Inflows
- Bhutan Gov. Dumps More Bitcoin Amid $410M Institutional Sell-Off in BTC ETFs
- Bitcoin Price Outlook As Gold And Silver Lose $3.6 Trillion in Market Value
- XRP and Ethereum Price Prediction as Trump Seeks to Lower Key Tariffs
- Solana Price Prediction as $2.6 Trillion Citi Expands Tokenized Products to SOL
- Bitcoin Price Could Fall to $50,000, Standard Chartered Says — Is a Crash Coming?
- Cardano Price Prediction Ahead of Midnight Mainnet Launch
- Pi Network Price Prediction as Mainnet Upgrade Deadline Nears on Feb 15
















