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- The IRS Just Proposed Killing Paper Crypto Tax Forms. Your Account Could Get Closed.
The IRS Just Proposed Killing Paper Crypto Tax Forms. Your Account Could Get Closed.
Form 1099-DA goes digital-only. Refuse consent, lose your Coinbase access.
The IRS just proposed eliminating paper crypto tax forms. Form 1099-DA - the new standardized form for reporting digital asset transactions - would be delivered electronically only, with no paper alternative.
And here's the part that matters: if you refuse to consent to electronic delivery, exchanges like Coinbase and Kraken could terminate your account.
The proposal was published March 5, 2026, under reference number REG-105064-25. Public comment period is open now before any final approval.
What the Proposal Actually Says
If finalized, crypto brokers could require customers to accept electronic delivery of Form 1099-DA as the only option. No paper alternative. No opt-out.
Customers who refuse consent could have their accounts closed.
That's sharper than most regulatory proposals that shift to electronic delivery. Usually, holdouts can stay on paper at higher cost or administrative burden. This one gives brokers the option to end the relationship entirely with non-consenting customers.
Whether exchanges actually exercise that option or use it as leverage to push compliance is an open question. But the IRS is giving them the authority to do it.
Why the IRS Is Doing This Now
Form 1099-DA is being phased in starting with the 2025 tax year. Two deadlines are already in effect:
• Brokers must provide 2025 Form 1099-DA to customers by March 17, 2026
• Brokers must e-file those same forms with the IRS by March 31, 2026
The new form requires brokers to report total transaction gains and cost basis directly to the IRS, standardizing crypto tax reporting the same way stock brokers have reported equity transactions for decades.
The IRS is building an automated system to process this data. Paper forms create friction in that pipeline. Electronic delivery eliminates the paper trail administratively while making the data machine-readable from the moment it's filed.
If brokers are already required to file electronically with the IRS, requiring electronic delivery to customers is a natural extension of the same infrastructure.
What This Means for Crypto Users
For most active crypto traders who already manage accounts digitally, mandatory electronic delivery changes nothing. The form arrives in an inbox instead of a mailbox.
But edge cases exist. Users who intentionally maintained crypto accounts without linking email addresses, or who have privacy concerns about electronic document trails, now face a choice: consent to electronic delivery or lose exchange access entirely.
That's a small population, but not trivial given the privacy-conscious segment of the crypto user base.
What This Means for CPAs
The broader implication here is directional: the IRS is treating crypto exchanges identically to traditional brokers for reporting purposes.
That's a normalization of crypto within the existing financial regulatory infrastructure. And it cuts both ways.
On one hand, it makes compliance easier. Crypto tax reporting now works like stock tax reporting. Clients get 1099s. You reconcile them. The process is standardized.
On the other hand, it closes the gray zone. Crypto users who operated under looser reporting standards for years are now in the same system as equity traders. The IRS gets automated feeds of transaction data, and matching that data to returns becomes trivial.
For tax practitioners, this means:
1. Your crypto clients will get 1099-DAs. Expect them starting this filing season for 2025 transactions.
2. Reconciliation matters. The IRS has the same data you do. Mismatches will trigger notices.
3. Cost basis tracking is mandatory. Brokers are reporting it now. No more handwaving on crypto gains.
The Transition Period Matters
The IRS has signaled it won't impose penalties for "good faith" reporting errors during this 2026 transitional period. That's an acknowledgment of the technological growing pains both brokers and taxpayers are facing.
But that grace period won't last forever. By 2027, expect full enforcement.
If you have crypto clients, now is the time to get their reporting cleaned up. The infrastructure is being built. The forms are being standardized. The automated matching is coming online.
Paper forms were the last holdout. Once those go away, crypto tax compliance looks exactly like equity tax compliance.
And the IRS knows exactly what you're trading.