Does Bitpay report to the IRS?
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funnyb25BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-09-09
- 39662
#36Comment -
raiders72001Senior Member
- 08-10-05
- 11076
#37Comment -
ArkySBR MVP
- 12-09-11
- 1095
#38Nope. When I checked "yes" in Turbo Tax last year, I was taken to the Schedule (A?) (D?)... the form where you report capital gains/losses. This also took me out of free Turbo Tax and they wanted me to upgrade to pay Turbo Tax.Comment -
raiders72001Senior Member
- 08-10-05
- 11076
#39The 2020 is different than the 2019. I could be wrong since I'll file cryptos but I thought those that weren't trading didn't have to do anything for 2020.Comment -
funnyb25BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-09-09
- 39662
#40I have my 2019 1040 right in front of me and I don't see a single question in regards to virtual currency on it unless I missed it. Just read it over a couple of times.Comment -
ArkySBR MVP
- 12-09-11
- 1095
#42
I was wrong about the change in the question. It was the same last year as this year.Last edited by Arky; 12-16-20, 11:47 PM.Comment -
ArkySBR MVP
- 12-09-11
- 1095
#44Eheh, well you got a tax preparer, that helps to shield ya from bastids. Did you discuss crypto with him last year? Sounds like your schedule 1 was insignificant, too, thus it was not needed.Comment -
funnyb25BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-09-09
- 39662
#45I dont think they know much about crypto. I didnt think I had a reason to even mention crypto as I never traded or invested in it. Simply held it for minutes while it hit the wallet from the book before I sent it to exchange then bank. I mentioned everything I do with betting offshore and how I just use it to move the funds. He doesn't think there is any tax concerns with anything I am doing, but like I said, these are tax professionals for big corporations and high net worth folks that most likely have never touched crypto. He is a good friend of my boss so he takes care of filing mine. But like I said, the packet that I had to sign everywhere never included a Schedule 1 Form.Comment -
ArkySBR MVP
- 12-09-11
- 1095
#46I dont think they know much about crypto. I didnt think I had a reason to even mention crypto as I never traded or invested in it. Simply held it for minutes while it hit the wallet from the book before I sent it to exchange then bank. I mentioned everything I do with betting offshore and how I just use it to move the funds. He doesn't think there is any tax concerns with anything I am doing, but like I said, these are tax professionals for big corporations and high net worth folks that most likely have never touched crypto. He is a good friend of my boss so he takes care of filing mine. But like I said, the packet that I had to sign everywhere never included a Schedule 1 Form.
Last year, me and a few others I met online concluded (rightly or wrongly), if there were no gains, we were going to say "no". We didn't owe anything so why say "yes"? Why waste each other's time (my time, the IRS's time)? And like I said, the one CPA I consulted - who said he wasn't versed in crypto - said not to say "yes" because it was a major hassle just to prove no gains....
Talk to your guy this year and see what he recommends....Comment -
raiders72001Senior Member
- 08-10-05
- 11076
#47Last edited by raiders72001; 12-17-20, 12:06 AM.Comment -
funnyb25BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-09-09
- 39662
#48OK, yeah, there are a lot of tax people that don't know jack about how to deal with crypto. The IRS didn't make it easy on them either.
Last year, me and a few others I met online concluded (rightly or wrongly), if there were no gains, we were going to say "no". We didn't owe anything so why say "yes"? Why waste each other's time (my time, the IRS's time)? And like I said, the one CPA I consulted - who said he wasn't versed in crypto - said not to say "yes" because it was a major hassle just to prove no gains....
Talk to your guy this year and see what he recommends....Comment -
ArkySBR MVP
- 12-09-11
- 1095
#49Comment -
ArkySBR MVP
- 12-09-11
- 1095
#50
Make sure you bring it up with him this year. I would be curious how he approaches it when someone has losses or no gains....Comment -
funnyb25BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-09-09
- 39662
#53Well, he probably should have asked you the question being your tax preparer. Perhaps you discussed how you gamble with him, he saw that nothing was owed and skipped it.... just guessing, here. Therefore, there was no need to tack on a Schedule 1.
Make sure you bring it up with him this year. I would be curious how he approaches it when someone has losses or no gains....Comment -
funnyb25BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-09-09
- 39662
#54Comment -
raiders72001Senior Member
- 08-10-05
- 11076
#55You lost gambling so leave it alone. Just mark "yes" and let it go. Many gamble and some estimate 10% of Americans have bitcoin. Unless you are winning and owe taxes, no one cares. It all comes down to $$$$.Comment -
ArkySBR MVP
- 12-09-11
- 1095
#56Comment -
ArkySBR MVP
- 12-09-11
- 1095
#57
The thing I'm saying here is you just can't say "yes" and let it go. Turbo Tax won't let you. Your taken to Schedule 1, Form 8949, Schedule D, etc and expected to fill stuff out....Comment -
Ghenghis KahnSBR Posting Legend
- 01-02-12
- 19734
#58They use an ancient computer system, once you hit "yes", you're categorized as someone that owes taxes for cryptos. Make your choices wisely. I'm sure you'll have to pay capital gains later down the line if you decide to sell your cryptos, you don't want to pay taxes for something you didn't make any money on.
I'm not 100% certain but even if you say you lost in gambling, unless you declare yourself a professional gambler, they don't give a fukk, you can't deduct your losses from gambling. All they care about is how much you bought, sold, or traded.Comment -
funnyb25BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-09-09
- 39662
#59They use an ancient computer system, once you hit "yes", you're categorized as someone that owes taxes for cryptos. Make your choices wisely. I'm sure you'll have to pay capital gains later down the line if you decide to sell your cryptos, you don't want to pay taxes for something you didn't make any money on.
I'm not 100% certain but even if you say you lost in gambling, unless you declare yourself a professional gambler, they don't give a fukk, you can't deduct your losses from gambling. All they care about is how much you bought, sold, or traded.Comment -
Ghenghis KahnSBR Posting Legend
- 01-02-12
- 19734
#60Ask your tax guy. IRS doesn't care about your gambling losses unless you declare yourself as a professional gambler. But they care about gambling winnings. I'm sure it's same with cryptos. You can't declare crypto losses due to gambling.Comment -
funnyb25BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-09-09
- 39662
#61Oh, I understand that. I don't have crypto gains though. I dobt trade or hold. I just move it immediately from book to wallet to bank. Doesn't have time to gain any aignicance of value. Sits there for a matter of secondsComment -
Ghenghis KahnSBR Posting Legend
- 01-02-12
- 19734
#62Lol are you saying you always lose? You never had a big score where you cashed out from a book? If so, I guess you don't have to worry about it and just put "no".
If Bill Clinton didn't have sexual relationship with Monica Lewinsky, well I don't hold any crypto.Comment -
funnyb25BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-09-09
- 39662
#63I am saying I don't hold or trade crypto so there are no gains or lossesComment -
BeatTheJerkBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 08-19-07
- 31794
#64...Comment -
BeatTheJerkBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 08-19-07
- 31794
#65Raiders did this change ? Is it official any 3,000 or more transaction can be taxed ...
BitPay complies with the requirements of Section 6050W of the Internal Revenue Code. This Section requires payment processors to provide information to the IRS through Form 1099-K reporting.
This requirement only applies in the case of merchants that receive payments from BitPay of more than $20,000 in gross volume and more than 200 separate payments in a single calendar year.Comment -
RocketMan$$$SBR High Roller
- 09-11-17
- 214
#66I looked at Coinbase and I am under 100 transactions and shows minus 400 dollars. I am going to check no on my taxes. Got in late with Bitcoin for the majority of the year, plus sports was dead for most of the year. This year will be a different story.Comment -
hello1234567SBR High Roller
- 12-05-13
- 231
#67How about the Crypto COM card? It is a pre-paid card too I believe. Do they report as well?Comment -
JoeCool20SBR MVP
- 05-31-18
- 4440
#69
in BTC. So no matter how fast I cashed it through to the bitpay c-card, it was ALL profit.
So I need to check yes because they can see that the original btc payouts went to my bit-pay acct. Right?Last edited by JoeCool20; 03-03-21, 01:49 AM.Comment
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