Germany Affirms Crypto Sold After One Year Is Tax-free (blockworks.co) 40
Crypto investors in Germany won't pay tax on sales of digital assets such as bitcoin and ether -- as long as they're held for more than one year. From a report: Germany's Federal Ministry of Finance shared the ruling in a 24-page document, which formally defined blockchain concepts such as mining, staking, airdrops and masternodes within the context of the country's tax system. The decree marks the first time Germany has issued nationwide tax guidance on cryptocurrency. It was crafted in close consultation with the country's 16 federal states, as well as top financial institutions. Government ministers had held a hearing last summer to gauge sentiment among local crypto associations such as Bitkom and other market participants -- including individual investors. One of the most pressing questions related to whether lending or staking cryptocurrency extends the tax-free period on digital asset sales to 10 years, as is the case with buy-to-let properties.
Cryptos has nothing to do with investing.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Cryptos has nothing to do with investing.. (Score:2)
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They could, but do they? Which exchanges charge you inactivity fees?
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That is a double-edged sword. Custodial wallets are one thing, but cryptocurrency sitting in a non-custodial wallet is another thing. A custodial wallet, one can be charged, but one that is completely independent, nobody can charge anything, and the money can sit there indefinitely.
However, most users don't know how to ensure their stuff gets taken, and what wallet choices to get. A paper wallet is great... but easily destroyed in a fire or flood. A metal wallet usually is in a BIP-39 format, and can st
Re:Cryptos has nothing to do with investing.. (Score:4, Informative)
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I got them last year when the rate was around 7 or something. This ratchet up is just icing. If you have more than $10k there's a way to invest more--through LLCs, which I thought was shady when I first heard about it, but it looks like it's OK to do with at least one LLC. Also, don't forget spouses and dependents--any valid SSN or tax ID; but surely there mus be limits to this, otherwise somebody would have set up a system to farm $10k deposits out over various entities, and hedgies would be parking fun
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That isn't entirely true-- miners are invested in cryptocurrency. A few hedging strategies could also be counted as investing. Day trading is obviously not. People holding it like gold are not investing either though, so the regulation is a bit odd to me.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Maybe if we built a Dyson Sphere around the Sun to power the network that can handle all those transactions.
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Bitcoin is a currency just like Iraqi Dinar. [whnt.com]
But seriously. Everyone is trading crypto like it's a stock. We were totally uninterested in currency exchange trading, buying and selling USD and EUR and whatever according to daily shifts. But crypto "currency" comes around and now we're all suddenly experts in trading it. It's such horseshit that I weep whenever I see another friend sucked into this growing blackhole of a scam.
Investment tips: buy real estate, grab all the sweet tax deductions; trade with put a
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But, no I would argue this
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Honestly. Nobody takes BTC seriously as a currency these days, except a few insane Kool-aid drinkers. Even the Bitcoin Maximalists now bill it as a Store of Value(tm).
Even while promoting LN.
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This is another nail in the coffin for the idea that Bitcoin et al will one day be a universal currency. If you're taxed for minor fluctuations between you receiving it and you spending it
Good point! If somebody pays you in Bitcoin you might be liable under tax laws if it fluctuates a bit before you spend it. The Feds will have a field day with that.
Remember: Al Capone was imprisoned for tax evasion, not for murder, robbery, drug trafficking, racketeering, prostitution, bribery, etc.
Why tax it at all? (Score:1, Troll)
Why tax it at all? Must the government fucking tax EVERYTHING?
I don't know about Germany specifically, but government tax money when you make it, they tax money when you use it to buy something. Some of them tax you when you add value to something. Why isn't that enough?
Sure - you may make some profit buying and selling scam currencies. So fucking what? Why isn't the tax on virtually ALL OTHER forms of income and spending that enough? The profit someone may make on scam currencies doesn't help them much u
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I've never heard anyone use that expression - and I don't know what it means. Nor do I care.
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If you drive a car, I'll tax the street,
If you try to sit, I'll tax your seat.
If you get too cold I'll tax the heat,
If you take a walk, I'll tax your feet.
Don't ask me what I want it for
If you don't want to pay some more
'Cause I'm the taxman, yeah, I'm the taxman
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Must the government fucking tax EVERYTHING?
Is that a joke? Unless you stop liking civilized society, yes, government must tax all forms of income and capital gains. If the waiter and the builder can pay taxes, so can the crypto bros. WTF makes them special?
Re: Why tax it at all? (Score:2)
You don't need to tax everything.
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If it's 'income' then it should be taxed. How hard is that to understand?
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And the sad thing is that many governments refer to it as "raising revenue", but the reality is taxes are about control. Governments can just print money (or quantitative easing is what it's called in developed economies) to pay for whatever they want, but adding money to the system devalues it (causes inflation, like what the US has right now). Taxes take money out of the economy, cooling it off (as do interest rates).
If crypto was really worth what it
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Why tax it at all? Must the government fucking tax EVERYTHING?
The saying goes: "If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it."
Taxation is a key way for governments to control inflation/deflation. Taxes remove money from circulation, reducing the flow of money in the system cools the economy.
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If you're taxing that sale, what's the problem?
It would make such sales expensive for everyone. Not only for the one who got money by an accidental or clever investment.
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Why isn't the tax on virtually ALL OTHER forms of income and spending that enough?
Nope.
Anything that isn't explicitly taxed can be used as a loophole to not pay taxes on other things.
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Governments need more money. And then more. And then more, and more and more and more GET TO WORK
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Others have already pointed it out but it is worth repeating. *All income* above a certain threshold must be taxed or otherwise the system becomes unfair. If the govt. said that crypto gains are not taxed at all, then they would have created a loophole that certain segment of society will take advantage of.
Don't ask the govt. to create special exceptions from taxations. Instead, ask that they reduce spending. And good luck with that. Both politica
Capital Loss (Score:1)
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I RTFA but I didn't see where it said anything about not being taxed as capital gains! It just looked like it was related to lending crypto and how that extends some kind of tax liability window.
I can't actually imagine an EU country not taxing a trade as capital gains (short- or long-term, doesn't matter).
Can someone else provide some illumination / clarification?
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No idea what you mean with "capital gains".
If you buy something on a stock market, and hold it longer than a year before selling it: it is tax free.
And the "new ruling" confirms that the same is true for "crypto currencies".
No thanks (Score:1)
They'll do anything to sucker you into "crypto".
Better than the US (Score:2)
Here if you HODL for more than a year, all you get for your trouble is a reduced capital gains rate. Plus if you score more than $250k you owe the ACA 3.8% tax which is not reduced.
New tax loophole? (Score:2)