Crypto Tax Filing, by people who know your numbers
Wallet-level reconciliation into per-lot 8949s, staking and reward income treated correctly, and returns that match what exchanges now report on 1099-DA.
- CPA & EA prepared and signed
- Industry-specific deduction review
- Federal + state included in quote
- Year-round support
What your return involves
The forms
Schedule D/Form 8949 with per-lot gain/loss detail; ordinary-income reporting for staking/mining/rewards; 1099-DA reconciliation; entity returns (1120/1120-S/1065) for project companies; 5472 for foreign-owned LLCs; FBAR/8938 where foreign exchanges apply.
The deadlines
Standard March 15 / April 15 entity and individual deadlines; the digital-asset question on page one must be answered accurately on every return. Full calendar on our 2026 deadlines page.
The deductions we chase for you
Transaction fees baked into basis, mining equipment depreciation and electricity for active operations, software and node costs, professional fees; loss harvesting across lots (executed correctly).
FAQ
The exchange's tax report doesn't match my records. Which wins?
Your reconciled wallet-level records — exchange reports miss transfers between your own wallets and misstate basis constantly. We rebuild from chain data and file what's defensible.
Do I owe tax on tokens I received but never sold?
Usually yes if they were rewards, staking income or payment — ordinary income at fair value on receipt. The later sale is a second, separate gain/loss event.
Want the bigger picture for your business type? See our full accounting & bookkeeping for crypto & web3 page, or the general US tax filing service.
File it right this year
Flat quote in one email — send last year's return and we'll also tell you what it missed.