For many years, crypto taxes and trading crypto has, for many, been the land of the free. Literally. Governments around the world are starting or have crypto banned, regulated or legalized. In Canada, this is not the exception. Since past few years, the tax authorities has had rules around crypto how to tax currency.
In order for a crypto tax accountant to be able to help process whether the trades were overall profitable or not – and therefore whether you owe crypto taxes, it is important to be able to have records available. Crypto exchanges are the on-ramp to the crypto world. A crypto exchange would the ones like Binance, BitBuy, Coinbase, among others. You would deposit your fiat by transferring your fiat by Direct Deposit (also known as ACH in the USA), or by credit card payment into the crypto exchange. Once there, you would buy your cryptos. The exchange would have a record. The other way would be to manually record every transaction on a piece of paper, on an Excel file. The tax authorities requires the following information:
- the date of the transactions
- the receipts of purchase or transfer of cryptocurrency
- the value of the cryptocurrency in Canadian dollars at the time of the transaction
- the digital wallet records and cryptocurrency addresses
- a description of the transaction and the other party (even if it is just their cryptocurrency address)
- the exchange records
- accounting and legal costs
- the software costs related to managing your tax affairs.
By now, every major crypto currency exchange should have the ability to track some or all these requirements.
How do I find out if the crypto exchange has downloadable records?
The best way is to deal with exchanges based in your home country. They will most likely be able to meet the Local Tax authorities record keeping requirements. However, if they are abroad, they will deal in their local currency and may not have complete information. At the very least, they will have the transaction date, the type of crypto and type of transaction.
What to look for?
- when you’re at the crypto exchange, look for terms like “export” or “view all transactions” and look for “download all transactions” and “export to csv”.
- reach out to each of the exchanges for human help.
- If the exchange has a “help” section, check if there’s a search box function over. Use terms like “export transactions” to see what search results come back. There might be a knowledge base page that will show you how to obtain the transactions.
STEP 1: Getting to the download “all transaction” section
Step 2: Download the CSV file
Step 3: You should end up with a CSV file as shown:
What about transactions recorded in the hardware wallet?
Cryptos can be stored in the cloud at the exchange or they can be transferred to a crypto wallet (a.k.a Cold Storage). An example of a crypto currency hardware wallet is Ledger Live. Ledger Live’s desktop application has the ability to download transactions in csv format. Unfortunately, the wallet doesn’t record the purchase cost of the crypto and doesn’t record the currency at the time of purchase used to buy or sell. Those elements are required by Tax Authorities and by a crypto accountant.
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