7 Crypto Transactions That Are Taxable Events Most Holders Miss

Sam's List Editorial | 2026-06-06

7 Crypto Transactions That Are Taxable Events Most Holders Miss This is the first filing season where the IRS receives Form 1099-DA from every major exchange — gross proceeds reporting started with 2025 transactions, and cost basis reporting phases in for assets acquired in 2026 and later. That changes the enforcement math completely. Before, the agency was fishing. Now it has the list. The problem isn't just under-reporting gains. It's that most holders don't know which crypto taxable events apply to them in the first place. They think "taxable" means "sold for dollars." It doesn't. Here are seven transactions that trigger a tax obligation — even if you never touched a bank account. 1. Swapping One Crypto for Another Is a Full Taxable Disposal A lot of people still think trading ETH for SOL is a tax-neutral rebalancing move. It isn't — and hasn't been since the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 closed the Section 1031 like-kind exchange loophole for crypto. Under IRC §1001, any exchange of property triggers recognition of gain or loss. When you swap ETH for SOL, you're disposing of ETH at its fair market value on the date of the trade. If your ETH cost basis was

,200 and it was worth $3,800 at the moment of the swap, you have a
,600 gain — even though you never sold anything for dollars. Every on-chain swap, every DEX trade, every rebalancing move inside a crypto portfolio is a disposal. Track every one. 2. DeFi Tax Reporting Trap: Depositing Into a Liquidity Pool Is Probably a Taxable Swap This is where DeFi tax reporting gets genuinely complicated. When you deposit ETH and USDC into a Uniswap liquidity pool, you receive LP tokens in return. Those LP tokens represent a new asset. The conservative, defensible position — and the one most crypto tax professionals take — is that you've just exchanged your ETH and USDC for LP tokens. That exchange is a taxable event at fair market value at the time of deposit, triggering gain or loss on the tokens you contributed. The IRS has not issued explicit guidance on LP tokens specifically, but the underlying logic of IRC §1001 covers it. Most DeFi participants never record this entry. When they exit the pool and the LP tokens are redeemed, they're missing half the transaction history. 3. Staking Rewards and Yield Farming Income Are Taxable the Day They Hit Your Wallet Rev. Rul. 2023-14 settled this: staking rewards are ordinary income at fair market value on the date of receipt. Not when you sell. Not when you move them. The moment they arrive in your wallet, you have income. This creates a brutal scenario. You...

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