I made investment in stable coins like GUSD which earns interest. I have not sold any crypto but do i need to report the interest income in 1099-MISC. The bank or the company will not send one for the next tax year. So wanted to find out.
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Here's a link to some tax info
https://www.cryptotrader.tax/blog/the-traders-guide-to-cryptocurrency-taxes
the way i look at this is similar to a dividend reinvestment program (DRIP). example you hold stock in a DRIP. dividends are paid by the company and reinvested in more stock. the amount of the dividend reinvested is taxable income. this is true despite the fact that you do not sell the stock. in fact the value of the overall holdings could fall and you would still report the full amount of the dividend as income. you get t take the s in value when you sell the stock. however, there are was sales rules. .
so my take is that such interest when credited to your account is taxable. any decline in the value of the crypto could only be taken when sold. You would also be subject to the wash sales rules
@Sodium120mg wrote:
I made investment in stable coins like GUSD which earns interest. I have not sold any crypto but do i need to report the interest income in 1099-MISC. The bank or the company will not send one for the next tax year.
Interest income is reported on Form 1099-INT, not 1099-MISC. Enter the interest in TurboTax as if you got a 1099-INT, even if you didn't actually get one. All you have to enter is the payer's name and the amount of interest.
@Sodium120mg wrote:
So wanted to find out.
What exactly do you want to find out? I told you how to enter the interest income in TurboTax. Was that your question, or is there something else?
Thanks for the clarification. Appreciate it.
BlockFi reports cryptocurrency interest income on 1099-MISC as "Other Income", not on a 1099-INT.
TurboTax Premier doesn't like this, and gives no direction. So, what's the preferred procedure, e.g. pretend its a 1099-INT or call it "prize money", or something else?
The best way to handle it is to enter as it shown on your form, Other income. It is being taxed in the same way as interest income, so it won't change your tax refund or balance due, but will help to avoid errors and red flags.
This initially works, but TurboTax doesn't accept it during the final review, i.e. it requires the entry to be edited and all the questions answered, and tries to treat this interest income as self-employment work income. After many iterations, I finally got it accepted (without being treated as work) by checking the box "No, it didn't involve an intent to earn money."
If you received a 1099-MISC, you should record it based on the form you received. That is what the IRS is looking for.
If you follow these posting directions it will not result in a self-employment issue.
BlockFi will generate a 1099-MISC only if you earned more than $600 in crypto interest. Then you can follow the steps easily. However, if you made less, you will NOT receive a form and you will have to report it somewhere else. I'm still trying to find the answer across forums.
If crypto interest does not reach the $600 annual threshold, you may not receive an IRS Form 1099-MISC.
If you have a record of the crypto interest earned, enter your staking rewards in TurboTax as follows:
The IRS has ruled that staking rewards only become taxable once the taxpayer "acquires the ability to transfer, sell, exchange, or otherwise dispose of the cryptocurrency."
You will need to convert your staking rewards to US dollars if they have not been issued is U.S. dollars.
I followed this advice in 2022, but my interest from GUSD is still treated as self-employment income by TurboTax.
It results in a higher tax bill than if it was on a 1099-INT.
Any advice in 2022?
Cheers,
If you follow these posting directions it will not result in a self-employment issue.
The self-employment tax will not be assessed.
the only reason i staked the crypto was because i knew i was going to receive interest for it. so technically, i did have an intent to earn money.
so i have reservations about your advise. can you elaborate on how you are sure of this?
The IRS has ruled that staking rewards become taxable once the taxpayer "acquires the ability to transfer, sell, exchange, or otherwise dispose of the cryptocurrency."
You will need to convert your staking rewards to US dollars if they have not been issued as U.S. dollars.
Here is how to enter your staking rewards in TurboTax as other income:
The entries will be reported:
Turbotax gives me a big fat warning "Do not enter income reported on Form 1099 MISC"... so even though i appreciate you replying, I can't follow your advise.
Furthermore, your claim about the IRS guidance about staking rewards doesn't seem to be accurate. There is no guidance on staking rewards just yet according to https://koinly.io/blog/irs-staking-court-case/. There's the expectation that they should be treated as income when received, and capital gain/losses when sold
For next tax year, the situation may improve as IRS is demanding crypto exchanges to start reporting crypto transactions to them and issue a 1099-B or a new version altogether in the following year (which I hope it's the case, let's avoid reusing forms that were not created with crypto in mind)
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