IRS Says No Bitcoin FBAR Reporting This Tax Season Required

The Internal Revenue Service has said that taxpayers need not report bitcoin holdings on FinCEN Form 114 (Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts – also known as FBAR) this tax season.

The news comes from Rod Lunquist, who’s a senior program analyst for the Small Business/Self-Employed Division at the Service, but added that the exception might end in the future as the authority monitors developments in the space.

“At this time, FinCEN has said Bitcoin is not reportable on the FBAR, at least for this filing season,” said Lundquist during a webinar, as first reported by Bloomberg BNA.

In order to remain compliant with tax laws, individuals who hold $10,000 or more in foreign financial accounts are required to use Form 114 and submit that information to FinCEN — the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.

The Internal Revenue Service continues to monitor the spectacular growth of digital currencies, and earlier this year issued a controversial guidance on the reporting of digital currency for federal tax purposes.

In that guidance, the Service made the following points:

The taxation landscape that surrounds bitcoin and digital currency is ever-changing, and the possibility things will change by next season seems likely.

[textmarker color=”C24000″]Source[/textmarker] Bloomberg BNA

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