Global Crypto‑Tax Rules Roll Out
InternationalSun Jun 07 2026
A new set of rules is coming to many countries to help tax officials see who buys and sells digital money. The system, created by the OECD with help from G20 nations, will automatically share information about crypto‑asset trades each year. It is not a single law but a guide that governments must adapt into their own rules, set up agreements with other tax authorities, and build the needed computer systems.
The framework has three parts. First, it offers detailed rules that countries can copy into their laws. Second, it includes a multilateral agreement that lets tax offices exchange data without extra paperwork. Third, it supplies an XML format so computers can read the reports quickly.
Which businesses must report? The rules say that any crypto‑asset service provider—whether a company or an individual—who runs a platform, handles customer trades, or acts as an intermediary must give information. The definition covers anyone who moves digital money for people on a regular basis, as long as the asset is not a central bank currency or an electronic money product that can’t be used for payments.
Reportable details include the user’s name, address, country of residence, tax ID (if needed), and birth data for people. For companies, the report must show who owns them and whether those owners are also required to report. Providers collect this data through self‑declared statements and standard anti‑money‑laundering checks.
Countries that want to share data need two things: a domestic law that allows automatic exchange and an agreement with another country’s tax office. The multilateral agreement explains how the yearly exchanges should happen and protects privacy.
When will this start? By early 2026, 47 countries plan to send their first reports in 2027, another 28 in 2028, and the United States will begin in 2029. The exact dates, penalties, and deadlines vary by nation because each must decide how to implement the OECD template locally.
The main takeaway is that the OECD has set a global standard, but each country decides how it will apply it. People and businesses should watch their local laws to know when they must start reporting crypto trades.
https://localnews.ai/article/global-cryptotax-rules-roll-out-987fc0bb
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