Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Virtual money on IRS radar

- LAURA DAVISON AND LYNNLEY BROWNING BLOOMBERG NEWS

The Internal Revenue Service is warning more than 10,000 holders of cryptocurr­ency that they may be subject to tax penalties on their virtual investment­s.

The IRS has begun sending letters to taxpayers who might have failed to report income and pay taxes on cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns, the agency said Friday. The IRS said it obtained the names of the taxpayers through “various ongoing IRS compliance efforts.”

“Taxpayers should take these letters very seriously by reviewing their tax filings and when appropri

ate, amend past returns and pay back taxes, interest and penalties,” IRS Commission­er Charles Rettig said in a statement Friday.

The letters, which the agency began sending last week, represent one of the IRS’ broadest attempts to date to rein in tax avoidance on virtual currency transactio­ns. The IRS has struggled to enforce tax laws on digital currencies in recent years as crypto investment­s have gained popularity and value.

Last year, the IRS’ audit division identified cryptocurr­encies as one of five areas where taxpayers could easily avoid taxes. IRS Criminal Investigat­ions head Don Fort has said the agency soon will announce criminal tax evasion cases involving digital currencies.

Taxpayers who receive the letters “generally won’t be eligible” for an IRS voluntary disclosure program, where taxpayers can come forward with undisclose­d financial accounts in exchange for the potential to reduce penalties or avoid criminal prosecutio­n, said Zhanna Ziering, a tax lawyer at law firm Caplin & Drysdale.

However, taxpayers who haven’t been notified by the IRS and may have underpaid or avoided taxes for cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns still could seek some relief by coming forward before the IRS finds them, she said. The IRS said all letters will be sent by the end of August.

The IRS in 2014 classified all virtual currencies as property for tax purposes, meaning the assets — much like a home — can be sold at a profit and trigger tax implicatio­ns. The agency served a summons against digital currency exchange Coinbase, seeking details about customers who traded digital currencies from 2013 to 2015.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Wednesday that U.S. regulators are likely soon to issue new regulation­s on cryptocurr­encies, so they don’t negatively affect the financial system.

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