Crypto may seem like just another form of money to you, but to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO), it certainly isn’t.
From their point of view, cryptocurrency is just another type of asset that people invest in, just like when they invest in shares. The tax treatment is fundamentally the same. If you buy for a dollar and then sell for $11 dollars then you have to deal with a ten dollar profit. That profit could be a capital gain or it could be quantified as simple business income.
The tax consequences of cryptocurrency |
If you are a simple investor in crypto, you may have bought $10,000 worth of the currency, and held onto it for five years to then sell it for say, $25,000. The $15,000 “profit” from that sale would most likely then be treated as a capital gain. You would be required to pay tax on half of that capital gain at your marginal rate.
But let’s say you are trading in crypto on a regular basis as well as mining for coins. This might indicate that you are actually in the “business” of trading crypto (just as people can be in the business of share trading). In this case, you are taxed on your profits as income and not as capital gains.
Usually, this won’t make a big difference because a trader doesn’t tend to hold their stock for more than a year and so they wouldn’t be entitled to the capital gains tax discount anyway as you have to hold the asset for more than 12 months.
This usually wouldn’t make a big difference, as a trader does not tend to hold their stock for more than a year. This means that they would not be entitled to the capital gains tax discount, as it requires you to hold the asset for more than 12 months to be eligible.
It is also very important to understand that the ATO receives the trading data from all the crypto trading houses (including overseas trading houses). You won’t be able to get away without declaring any trading profit from any crypto that you own.
We’re ready to help. If you are unsure as to how to treat your crypto gains and losses, please contact our team +61 3 9820 6400.
eSigning & remote witnessing as good as ink
Having to print and physically distribute documents for signing is now a task of the past. Electronic signatures and virtual witnessing is now formally accepted as satisfying the document execution requirements of section 127 of the Corporations Act.
The amendment is seen by many as long overdue given the covid-challenges of having dispersed signatories as a result of remote working directions and border closures.