Will U.S. Bitcoin Miners Be Exempted From New Tax Rules If Infrastructure Bill Proposal Goes Through?

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Miners Have Already Earned Over $700 Million In Bitcoin Revenue This Month
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A new proposal to amend the U.S. bipartisan infrastructure bill introduced to the Senate on Sunday could exempt cryptocurrency miners, those staking crypto, and users of their services from reporting and paying tax on their cryptocurrencies.

If the amendment proposal sails through Senate, it could also remove the requirement for crypto service providers and those who sell crypto storage hardware to report their clients’ activity relating to transactions, which facilitates taxation. Additionally, developers who create digital assets, for tax reporting purposes, will not be required to monitor and report the use of these assets outside their platforms that is if the people using them are not their customers.

The proposal, which is likely to be considered on Saturday, will be tabled by the Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon and Republican Sens. Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania.

The amendment proposals seek to narrow down the meaning of the term “brokers” as is used in the bill. It would, instead, “clarify that ‘brokers’ mean only those persons who conduct transactions on exchanges where consumers buy, sell and trade digital assets,” according to the press release. Wyden said the previous definition was too broad while Lummis said the amendments would help pave way for the integration of digital assets into the U.S. financial sector.  

Without the said amendment proposals, the Senate’s bipartisan infrastructure bill adds new reporting requirements for all “brokers” and this affects the crypto industry. That was not in the previous taxation requirements. The change is being undertaken to help the government raise more taxes from the crypto industry through the IRS.

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As it is, the bill defines a broker as “any person who (for consideration) is responsible for regularly providing any service effectuating transfers of digital assets on behalf of another person” and requires them to file information reporting returns to the IRS.

For instance, the bill will require U.S. crypto traders transacting on crypto exchanges like Coinbase to report their gains regularly for taxation purposes. Users of decentralized peer-to-peer exchanges are already exempt from reporting following an amendment made last weekend.