If you mine cryptocurrency, your mining hardware (ASICs, GPUs, mining rigs) and the electricity used to power them are fully deductible business expenses. Section 179 allows you to expense the full cost of equipment in the year of purchase rather than depreciating it over time.
A miner who spends $15,000 on ASICs and $8,000/year on electricity saves $5,750 in taxes at a 25% effective rate — plus Section 179 allows full first-year expensing of the hardware.
Document electricity usage with a dedicated circuit or smart meter. Keep all hardware receipts. If mining is a hobby, deductions are limited — structure as a business to maximize deductions.
Staking rewards are treated as ordinary income when received. However, losses from DeFi protocols, rug pulls, and worthless tokens may be deductible as casualty losses or worthless security losses under IRC §165. Proper documentation is critical.
A DeFi investor who lost $40,000 in a protocol hack and $20,000 in a rug pull may deduct those losses to offset $60,000 in other crypto gains — saving $14,280 at a 23.8% rate.
Document all DeFi losses with transaction records. Worthless token losses require proof the token has zero value. Consult a tax professional before claiming rug pull losses.
Sell cryptocurrency at a loss to offset capital gains from other investments. Unlike stocks, crypto is NOT subject to the wash-sale rule, so you can immediately repurchase the same asset.
An investor with $80,000 in crypto gains and $50,000 in crypto losses nets $30,000 in taxable gains — saving $11,900 at a 23.8% long-term rate vs. paying on the full $80,000.
Harvest losses before December 31. Immediately repurchase to maintain market exposure — no 30-day waiting period required for crypto. Track cost basis meticulously.
A UNK client had $45,000 in unrealized losses across several altcoin positions during a market correction. He also had $60,000 in capital gains from selling Bitcoin earlier in the year. Uncle Kam identified the key advantage: unlike stocks, cryptocurrency is not subject to the wash-sale rule. The client sold the losing positions, harvested $45,000 in losses, and immediately repurchased the same coins — maintaining his full market exposure. The $45,000 in losses offset $45,000 of his gains, reducing his net capital gain to $15,000.
Hold crypto with unrealized losses? You can harvest them today and repurchase immediately. Book a call before year-end to capture your losses.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallNo — as of 2026, the wash-sale rule (which disallows a loss if you repurchase the same security within 30 days) does not apply to cryptocurrency. The IRS classifies crypto as property, not a security, so you can sell crypto at a loss and immediately repurchase the same coin without losing the tax deduction. This may change with future legislation, but for now it is a significant advantage over stock tax-loss harvesting.
The IRS treats cryptocurrency as property. Selling, trading, or spending crypto triggers a capital gain or loss equal to the difference between your cost basis and the sale price. Short-term gains (held less than 1 year) are taxed as ordinary income; long-term gains (held more than 1 year) are taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on your income. Receiving crypto as payment for services is taxed as ordinary income.
Net capital losses (including crypto losses) can offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year. Losses above $3,000 carry forward to future years to offset future capital gains or additional ordinary income. There is no limit on how many years losses can carry forward.
Trading one cryptocurrency for another (e.g., Bitcoin for Ethereum) is a taxable event — you must report the gain or loss on each trade. Using crypto to purchase goods or services is also taxable. Simply holding crypto (HODLing) is not a taxable event. Receiving crypto as a gift is not taxable until you sell it (your basis is the donor's basis or the fair market value on the date of the gift, whichever is lower).
You must track: the date of each acquisition, the cost basis (purchase price plus fees), the date of each sale or exchange, the sale proceeds, and the resulting gain or loss. For large portfolios with many transactions, crypto tax software (CoinTracker, Koinly, TaxBit) can automate this tracking. The IRS requires you to report all crypto transactions, and exchanges are required to issue 1099s for transactions above certain thresholds.
NFT creators who sell digital art, music, or collectibles as a business can deduct gas fees paid to mint and list NFTs, marketplace commissions (OpenSea, Blur, etc.), design software subscriptions, digital art tools, and marketing costs. These are ordinary and necessary business expenses under IRC §162.
An NFT artist who pays $8,000 in gas fees, $3,000 in platform commissions, and $2,000 in design software annually deducts $13,000 — saving $3,250 at a 25% rate.
Track all gas fees with wallet transaction records. Marketplace commissions are automatically deductible as a cost of sale. Keep receipts for all design tools and software.
Contribute cash or appreciated assets to a DAF, receive an immediate charitable deduction, avoid capital gains on donated assets, and distribute grants to charities at your own pace.
Donating $100,000 in appreciated stock (basis $20,000) to a DAF: $100,000 deduction + $16,000 in avoided capital gains tax = $53,000 in total tax savings at 37%.
Bunch multiple years of charitable giving into one year to exceed the standard deduction threshold. Invest DAF assets for tax-free growth before distributing.
A UNK client planned to donate $10,000/year to her church and local charities over the next 5 years. Uncle Kam introduced the concept of "bunching" — contributing 5 years of donations ($50,000) into a Donor-Advised Fund in a single year. This pushed her itemized deductions well above the standard deduction ($29,200 for MFJ), generating a $50,000 charitable deduction in Year 1. At her 37% marginal rate, the deduction saved $18,500 in federal taxes. She then distributed $10,000/year from the DAF to her chosen charities over the following 5 years.
Planning to give to charity? A Donor-Advised Fund can double your tax benefit without changing how much you give. Book a call to structure your giving strategy.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallA Donor-Advised Fund (DAF) is a charitable giving account sponsored by a public charity (such as Fidelity Charitable or Schwab Charitable). You contribute cash, securities, or other assets to the DAF, receive an immediate tax deduction for the full contribution, and then recommend grants to qualified charities over time. The assets grow tax-free inside the DAF until distributed.
Cash contributions to a DAF are deductible up to 60% of AGI. Contributions of appreciated securities are deductible at fair market value up to 30% of AGI. Excess contributions carry forward for up to 5 years. Unlike private foundations, DAFs have no minimum distribution requirement.
Bunching means contributing multiple years of planned charitable giving into a DAF in a single year to exceed the standard deduction threshold and itemize. For example, instead of donating $10,000/year for 5 years (which may not exceed the standard deduction), you contribute $50,000 in Year 1 to a DAF, take the full itemized deduction, and then distribute $10,000/year to charities from the DAF over the following 5 years.
Yes — and this is one of the most powerful aspects of a DAF. You can contribute long-term appreciated stock directly to the DAF, deduct the full fair market value (up to 30% of AGI), and avoid paying capital gains tax on the appreciation. The DAF can then sell the stock tax-free and invest the proceeds for future charitable distributions.
A DAF is simpler and cheaper to establish (no legal fees, no IRS approval), has no minimum distribution requirement, offers higher deduction limits, and provides anonymity for grants. A private foundation offers more control (you can hire family members, make program-related investments, and set your own grant criteria) but requires 5% annual distributions, has lower deduction limits, and faces excise taxes on investment income.
Sell investments at a loss to offset capital gains from other investments, reducing or eliminating capital gains tax. Excess losses offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income annually.
Harvesting $50,000 in losses offsets $50,000 in capital gains, saving $10,000 at a 20% long-term rate. Excess losses carry forward indefinitely.
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Web3 founders and DAO contributors can deduct token compensation paid to contributors (as ordinary business expenses), smart contract audit fees, legal fees for token structuring and regulatory compliance, protocol development costs, and governance participation expenses. Token compensation paid to contributors is deductible at fair market value on the date of transfer.
A Web3 founder who pays $80,000 in token compensation to contributors and $30,000 in smart contract audits deducts $110,000 — saving $27,500 at a 25% rate.
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Donate appreciated securities directly to charity and receive a deduction for the full fair market value while avoiding capital gains tax on the appreciation.
Donating $50,000 in stock (basis $5,000): $50,000 deduction + $9,000 avoided capital gains = $27,500 total tax savings vs. $18,500 if you sold and donated cash.
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Assets transferred at death receive a new cost basis equal to the fair market value at the date of death, eliminating all embedded capital gains that accrued during the decedent's lifetime.
A $2M stock portfolio with a $200,000 original basis: if held until death, heirs inherit with a $2M basis, eliminating $360,000 in capital gains taxes.
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Each cryptocurrency trade, swap, or exchange is a taxable event. Proper structuring — holding periods, loss harvesting, and entity selection — can dramatically reduce crypto tax liability.
A trader with $200,000 in short-term crypto gains who restructures to maximize long-term holds and harvests $60,000 in losses saves $37,000 in taxes.
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Invest capital gains from any source into a Qualified Opportunity Fund within 180 days to defer the gain until December 31, 2026, and eliminate all taxes on appreciation after 10 years.
A $2M capital gain invested in a QOF: defers $400,000 in taxes until 2026. If the fund doubles to $4M in 10 years, the $2M appreciation is completely tax-free.
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Defer and potentially eliminate capital gains taxes by investing in Qualified Opportunity Zone Funds within 180 days of a capital gain event.
Investing $500,000 of capital gains into a QOF and holding 10 years eliminates all taxes on the new appreciation — potentially $300,000+ in tax-free gains.
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Invest capital gains into a Qualified Opportunity Fund within 180 days to defer the original gain until 2026 and eliminate all appreciation on the QOZ investment after a 10-year hold.
An investor with $500,000 in capital gains invests in a QOZ fund. The $500K gain is deferred to 2026. If the fund grows to $1.5M, the $1M appreciation is completely tax-free.
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Transfer appreciated assets into a CRT, receive an immediate charitable deduction, avoid capital gains on the sale, and receive income payments for life or a term of years.
Transferring $1M in appreciated stock (basis $100,000) to a CRT eliminates $180,000 in capital gains tax, generates a $300,000+ charitable deduction, and provides lifetime income.
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Founders and investors in qualified small businesses can exclude up to $10 million (or 10× their adjusted basis) in capital gains from federal income tax when selling stock held for more than 5 years.
A founder selling $10M in QSBS stock (basis $100K) excludes the entire $9.9M gain, saving $1.98M in federal capital gains taxes.
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Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) under Section 1202 allows founders, employees, and investors to exclude up to $10 million (or 10x basis) in capital gains when selling stock held for more than 5 years.
A founder who sells $10M in QSBS stock pays $0 in federal capital gains tax — saving $2,380,000 vs. the 23.8% long-term rate.
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Spread the recognition of capital gains from a property sale over multiple years by receiving payments in installments, keeping annual income in lower tax brackets.
Selling a property with $600,000 in gains. Spreading over 6 years keeps you in the 15% capital gains bracket instead of 20%, saving $30,000+.
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Unlike stocks, crypto is NOT subject to the wash-sale rule (IRC §1091) — you can sell at a loss, immediately rebuy, and still claim the full deduction. This is the #1 crypto tax strategy.
Donating appreciated crypto directly to charity lets you deduct the full fair market value AND avoid capital gains tax — worth 20–37% more than selling and donating cash.
Mining income is taxed as ordinary income at receipt — but mining equipment and electricity costs are fully deductible business expenses under IRC §162.
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