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How crypto capital gains tax works (2026)

By Editorial team · 2026-06-14

In short: In 2026, most countries tax crypto as property: a gain arises whenever you sell, swap, spend or gift it, calculated as proceeds minus cost basis. The US splits gains into short-term (ordinary rates) and long-term (0/15/20%) by a 12-month line; the UK taxes gains above a £3,000 allowance at 18% or 24%; Canada includes 50% of the gain in income; Australia halves the gain after 12 months. These are estimates, not tax advice.

Crypto capital gains tax applies whenever you dispose of a cryptocurrency at a profit. A disposal means selling for cash, swapping one coin for another, spending crypto on goods, or gifting it (rules vary). Your gain is the proceeds minus your cost basis — what you originally paid, including fees. How that gain is taxed depends on your country and, in some places, how long you held the asset. This guide covers the 2026 rules for the United States, United Kingdom, Canada and Australia. Everything here is an estimate for general information, not tax advice — confirm with the IRS, HMRC, CRA or ATO.

What counts as a taxable disposal

In every country covered here, cryptocurrency is treated as property or an asset, not as money. That has one big consequence: a taxable event happens far more often than people expect. The common disposals are:

Moving coins between wallets you control is not a disposal, and simply holding is never taxable. To work out the gain on any of these, you need an accurate cost basis — our average cost & cost-basis calculator pools your buys into one weighted-average figure.

United States (IRS)

The US splits gains by a 12-month holding period:

High earners may also owe the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax. The IRS allows FIFO or specific-identification cost-basis methods, and from 2026 brokers report transactions on the new Form 1099-DA. See our deep-dive on short vs long-term gains.

United Kingdom (HMRC)

The UK does not use a holding-period split. Instead, every taxpayer gets an Annual Exempt Amount of £3,000 for 2025/26 (down from prior years). Gains above that allowance are taxed at:

HMRC requires share-pooling (a weighted-average cost basis). You must report gains over the allowance, or proceeds over £50,000, via Self Assessment by 31 January after the tax year.

Canada (CRA)

Canada includes only 50% of your capital gain in taxable income — the proposed two-thirds inclusion rate was cancelled in March 2025 and never took effect. The included half is added to your income and taxed at your marginal federal rate (the lowest bracket was cut to 14% for 2026), plus provincial tax. Canada uses the adjusted cost base (ACB) method.

Australia (ATO)

Australia rewards long holders with the 50% CGT discount: if a resident individual holds a crypto asset for more than 12 months, only half the gain is taxed. Held 12 months or less, the full gain is taxed at your marginal rate (0%–45%, plus Medicare levy). From 1 July 2027 the discount is scheduled to change to an inflation-based model, but for 2026 the 50% discount stands.

Side-by-side comparison

CountryHolding-period splitTax-free allowanceHow the gain is taxed
US (IRS)Yes, 12 monthsNone (uses brackets)Short-term: 10–37%; long-term: 0/15/20%
UK (HMRC)No£3,000 (2025/26)18% or 24% above allowance
Canada (CRA)NoNone50% of gain at marginal rate (+ provincial)
Australia (ATO)Yes, 12 monthsNone50% discount after 12 months, then marginal rate

You can plug your own numbers into the crypto capital-gains tax estimator, which applies each of these 2026 rules with a country selector.

A worked example

Suppose you bought $20,000 of crypto and sold it for $35,000 — a $15,000 gain — after holding 18 months, on $60,000 of other income:

These are illustrative; your actual bill depends on your full income and circumstances.

Common pitfalls

The biggest mistakes are forgetting that swaps are disposals, losing track of cost basis across exchanges, and ignoring staking or airdrop income, which is usually taxed separately as ordinary income. We cover these in common crypto tax mistakes and staking rewards and taxes.

Keep records of every transaction — date, amount, value in your local currency, and fees — and you’ll be able to calculate gains accurately and defend them if asked. When in doubt, use a qualified tax professional; this article is an estimate-focused explainer, not personalised advice.

Frequently asked questions

Is simply holding crypto taxable?

No. Buying and holding is not a taxable event in the US, UK, Canada or Australia. Tax only arises when you dispose of the asset — selling, swapping, spending or (sometimes) gifting it.

Is swapping one coin for another taxable?

Yes, in all four countries. A crypto-to-crypto swap disposes of the first asset at its market value, producing a capital gain or loss even though no fiat changes hands.

Which country has the lowest crypto tax?

It depends on your income and holding period. Long-term US gains can be taxed at 0% for low earners, the UK gives a £3,000 tax-free allowance, and Australia and Canada effectively tax only half of qualifying long-term gains.

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Last updated: 2026-06-14