I am a U.S. resident with dual citizenship. This allows me to use Binance from my country of origin, not Binance U.S. I have been sending USDT from my Robinhood and Coinbase accounts to my Binance wallet. However, Binance is not allowed in the U.S., and all the transactions in my Binance account, both incoming and outgoing, are apparently subject to taxes, but in the country where the account is based. In this case, my Binance account was and is being used outside the U.S., and its KYC verification is tied to a country other than the U.S. The thing is, I have been sending USDT to that wallet, and vice versa, meaning from my Binance account, I send to Robinhood or Coinbase. All of these transactions are between my own accounts, and there are no third-party transfers involved. My question is: should I download the CSV file from Binance to upload it to some software that helps me prepare my crypto taxes? In other words, do I need to account for all the transactions that occurred on Binance when filing my U.S. taxes? Keep in mind, it's Binance, not Binance U.S.
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(a) US taxes for a US person ( citizen/GreenCard/ Resident for Tax Purposes ) is on world income ( including digital assets ( and/or income therefrom ). US , at least for tax purposes , does not recognize dual citizenship to the extent that it does not interfere with tax treaty with that " other" country.
(b) I don't know for sure but I think TurboTax does not deal with .csv files directly. You would have to use a spreadsheet (or otherwise ) to create the final figures as to earnings from your trades and/or earnings from the digital assets and holdings thereof.
(c) Note that you have convert all incomes to US$ using conversion factors from reputable sources ( US Treasury / IRS/ Yahoo Finance etc. etc. ), generally using dollar of the day . Just keep good records of the figures and conversion factors you used.
(d) if the "other" country also taxes the incomes and there is a tax treaty in effect at the time along with "double" taxation clause, those foreign taxes may be eligible for Foreign Tax Credit / deduction. There is ample material/discussions on this subject on this forum.
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In my country of origin, I use the local currency to buy USDT. I then convert those USDT into USDC to send them to my Robinhood or Coinbase account. So, it’s not about making a profit, it’s simply a cryptocurrency purchase. When the USDC arrives in my Robinhood or Coinbase account, I sell them for USD, and from there, I transfer the funds to my bank account. For example, if I bought 1,000 USDT on Binance, that’s the same amount I receive in my bank account at the end of the process. How can I categorize these transactions?
@Lalita202 , thank you for your response. While I am not quite familiar with the terms you used ( USDT --token /, USDC - --coin etc. ), my understanding is that you are taking something in foreign currency ( or equivalent ) and then after a process ending up with US$ in your bank account. If that is so , for purposes US taxes , it is not material as to the exact process of conversion. You have to recognize ( and pay taxes ) on ANY increase in US$ value. Because of the variances in Digital asset values , it may cause some fluctuation in foreign currency in and actual US$ in your account. All you can do is to keep good records to prove your claims. Note that while any gains realized is taxable most losses are personal and not deductible.
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