Over Half of U.S. Crypto Holders Fear IRS Tax Penalties Under New Reporting Rules

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A recent survey by Awaken Tax revealed that over half of 1,000 U.S. cryptocurrency rules holders are concerned about IRS penalties under new reporting requirements. The 2026 rules mandate crypto brokers like Coinbase to file Form 1099-DA for all transactions, but the form lacks tax basis data, complicating capital gains reporting. Awaken Tax founder Andrew Duca criticized the rules as overly simplistic, noting that many users fail to report accurately. Coinbase has urged users to correct errors using Form 8949. Meanwhile, new token listings continue to draw attention, though compliance remains a challenge for many investors.

A recent poll of 1,000 American investors in digital assets found that over half are scared they'll face an IRS tax penalty this year as new transparency rules governing crypto exchanges take effect.

The data collected at the end of January by crypto tax platform Awaken Tax canvassed U.S. holders’ concerns about a radical shift from self-disclosure to automatic reporting of transactions.

This has been enacted through the introduction of the “Digital Asset Proceeds From Broker Transactions,” or Form 1099-DA, which tens of millions of Americans will be made aware of over the next month or so.

The new rules are designed to clamp down on crypto tax evasion and compel brokers, such as crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN), to report all sales and exchanges of digital assets that took place during 2025 to the tax agency.

The aim is to give tax authorities a clear view of investor gains and losses by opening up customer data inside exchanges for the first time, allowing the IRS to compare what crypto brokers report with what taxpayers file.

While the goal is to remove any margin of error, the rules are a “blunt instrument,” created by legislators who know nothing about crypto, according to Awaken Tax founder Andrew Duca.

“It means crypto is being treated like stocks, but it doesn’t behave in that way. Real crypto users will move assets between multiple wallets and interact with decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols, using pretty complex trading strategies,” Duca said.

Companies like Coinbase can provide information only on the proceeds of sales of crypto and are unable to report tax basis for any given digital asset — typically the purchase price plus acquisition costs — which can then be used to calculate capital gains or losses upon its sale.

“Coinbase actually cannot send the right information, because you can imagine if someone has bitcoin in a cold storage wallet ledger, they send it to Coinbase to sell. Coinbase doesn't know your acquisition price, what you bought it for. So Coinbase is sending incorrect forms to the IRS. The 1099-DA form reports proceeds, but it doesn’t report tax basis,” Duca said.

Coinbase is well aware of the confusion this will cause. The onus falls on the holder of crypto to “patch” what’s missing in terms of their crypto acquisition costs and actual tax basis via the IRS’s updated Form 8949, Duca said.

Duca acknowledges that crypto tax compliance is extremely low: Under 20% of crypto holders report what they ought to, he said.

“It’s really not been thought out well and is kind of horrible for crypto users. But it's what they could do the quickest and the easiest,” Duca said. “They just added this super blunt instrument to try to get that 20% up to 80% in a year.”


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