The U.S. Internal Revenue Service announced Wednesday that it will postpone new tax reporting requirements for cryptocurrencies until the start of 2026. The delay will allow brokers to adapt to the new regulations on determining the cost basis for cryptocurrencies on centralized platforms. In July, the IRS and Treasury Department finalized and published new rules for determining which cryptocurrency units are sold when investors hold multiple units in a brokerage account, such as a centralized exchange.
Under these rules, if a taxpayer has not identified a preferred accounting method, the First-In, First-Out (FIFO) method will be applied, treating the earliest acquired crypto assets as sold first. The mandate was set to go into effect on Jan. 1, 2025, and now it’s postponed by one year. “Now, there was a practical problem with this approach,” CoinTracker Head of Tax Shehan Chandrasekera wrote on X. The tax expert explained that almost all centralized finance (CeFi) brokers were not prepared to support the specific identification method that allows users to choose which cryptocurrency units they are disposing of.
This would have left crypto investors with no option but to sell assets under FIFO from the start of 2025, which Chandrasekera said could have been “disastrous” in the current bull market environment. “You’d be unintentionally selling the earliest purchased asset (which tends to have the lowest cost basis) first while unknowingly maximizing your capital gains,” the tax expert wrote.
The temporary relief signed off by the IRS gives a one-year grace period, during which brokers are expected to develop support for other accounting methods. The new tax accounting rule will take effect on Jan. 1, 2026. Meanwhile, the Blockchain Association, the DeFi Education Fund, and the Texas Blockchain Council filed a lawsuit last week to challenge another IRS rule requiring some DeFi brokers to store and report users’ personal information and trading history to the agency starting in 2027.
- Kamala Harris VP Short List Shows Mixed Support For Crypto Issues
- President Trump Signs Executive Order to Stop ‘Unfair Banking’ of Crypto Industry
- California Passes Bill to Seize Unclaimed Bitcoin and Crypto
- Crypto Groups Urge Senate to Protect Developers in US Market Bill
- The White House to Host First Ever Crypto Summit, Including Founders From Coinbase, Chainlink & Ripple
- Consensys Sues SEC Over Ethereum Classification, Calls For Regulatory Clarity






























































































































