Ifย youโveย sold an NFT and assumed it would be taxed like any other crypto asset, you may be in for an unpleasant surprise. Depending on what your NFTย represents, the IRS may treat the gain as coming from the sale of a collectible, which can trigger a higher federal tax rate and createย additionalย planning issues.ย
To understand these implications, this post builds on a prior article I wrote discussing recent IRS guidance andย expands onย how those rules can directly affect NFT sales today.ย
Understanding the IRSโs View on NFTsย
In March 2023, the Internal Revenue Service issued IRS Notice 2023-27, signaling its intent to treat certain NFTs as collectibles under Internal Revenue Code ยง408(m). While the notice does notย establishย final, binding rules, it outlines how the IRS plans to analyze NFTs until more formal guidance is released.ย
Rather than focusing on the NFT itself, the IRS applies a โlook-throughโ analysis. In simple terms,ย the taxย treatment depends on what the NFTย representsย or is linked to.ย
If the underlying right or asset associated with the NFT were considered a collectible, the NFT itself may also be treated as a collectible for tax purposes.ย
What Counts asย a Collectible?ย
Section 408(m) defines collectibles as including works of art, rugs, antiques, metals, gems, stamps, coins, alcoholic beverages, and certain other tangibleย personal property. The tax code does not clearly define what constitutes a โwork of art,โ which is where many NFTs enter a gray area.ย
Most art-based NFTs, including digital illustrations, generative art projects, and profile-picture collections, areย likely candidatesย for collectible treatment. NFTs tied to physical collectibles, such as tokenized artwork, jewelry, gemstones, or trading cards, are even more clearly exposed.ย
By contrast, NFTs that function primarily as utility tokens, access passes, or membership credentials may fall outside the collectible category, depending on the facts and circumstances.ย The key question is always what the NFTย actually represents.ย
Why Collectible Treatment Matters for NFT Salesย
The distinction is important because collectibles are taxed less favorably than most other capital assets.ย
Long-term capital gains on collectibles are subject to a maximum federal rate of 28 percent, rather than the standard 0, 15, or 20 percent rates that apply to most long-term capital gains. High-income taxpayers may also owe the 3.8 percent net investment income tax on top of that, further raising the effective federal rate.ย
For taxpayers who actively trade NFTs or who realized large gains during the last market cycle, this difference alone can mean tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars inย additionalย tax.ย
Special Problems for NFTs Held in IRAsย
Collectible treatment creates even bigger problems when NFTs are held inside a self-directed IRA. Under ยง408(m), IRAs are prohibited from investing in collectibles. If an IRAย purchasesย a collectible, the IRS treats the transaction as a distribution equal to the amount invested.ย
That means the entire purchase price can becomeย immediatelyย taxable, along with potential early distribution penalties if the account holder isย under ageย 59ยฝ. This is why I have consistentlyย advised clients toย avoid holding NFTs in IRAs until the IRS provides clearer and more favorable guidance.ย
How the IRS Is Likely to Enforce Thisย
Although Notice 2023-27 is technically interim guidance, it gives a strongย indicationย of the IRSโs enforcement posture. The notice explicitly asks for comments on when a digital file should be treated as a โwork of art,โ suggesting that the IRS is actively considering how broadly to apply the collectible label.ย
In practice, it is reasonable to expect the IRS to argue that most current art-focused NFT projects qualify as collectibles. NFTs that certify ownership of other collectible assets are also likely to fall squarely within the rules.ย
What NFT Investors Should Do Nowย
If you have sold NFTs, hold valuable NFTs, or are considering future NFT investments, it is important to evaluate whether collectible treatment may apply. This includes reviewing the nature of the NFT, the rights it conveys, and how it would be characterized under ยง408(m) if those rights existed outside of blockchain technology.ย
For past sales, proper reporting is important. Treating a collectible NFT sale as a standard crypto transaction can understate tax liability and increase audit risk. For future transactions, knowing the rules helps with pricing, holding, and planning decisions.ย
Conclusionย
NFT taxation is evolving, and the IRS has made it clear that NFTs resembling art or collectibles willย likely beย taxed as such. The key takeaway is that the nature of what the NFTย representsย directly affects its tax treatment.ย Failing to recognizeย this can cause unexpectedly high tax bills for NFT owners and investors.ย
Until clearer guidance is issued, conservative planning and careful analysis are essential. The most important takeaway is to actively assess your exposure to collectible tax treatment and consult knowledgeable tax advisors for NFT transactions. This can help you stay compliant and avoid costly mistakes.ย