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by rmah
1919 days ago
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Whether the crypto you receive in compensation is considered a security or not will not matter from an income tax perspective in the US. If you were paid in stock, you would owe taxes on the compensation at the price of the stock at the time you received it. You might also be subject to capital gains tax if you sell the asset (stock or security-crypto) if you sell it with a cost basis calculated at the time you received it. IOW, if you got paid say 10 ETH, priced at $1800/ETH, you would owe income tax for $18,000 that year. It does not matter if you sell the ETH or not. It does not matter if ETH is considered a security or not. You pay taxes on the value of compensation whether the compensation is in USD, stock, ETH or chickens. If you subsequently sold the ETH for $2000/ETH, you would then owe capital gains taxes on 10 * (2000 - 1800) = $2000 of capital gains. Possibly short term, possibly long term depending on when you sell it. |
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Your analysis should be correct based on my understanding of the tax treatments