If you are actively trading crypto, you’ve probably asked this question:
“Can I qualify for trader tax status and reduce my taxes?”
It’s a fair question, especially if you’re trading frequently or even full-time.
But here’s the reality:
Trader tax status generally does not apply to crypto traders under the current IRS rules.
That doesn’t mean there is no planning available. But it does mean you need to understand how the rules actually work, as they are not the same as how they work for stock traders.
Let’s break it down.
1. Investor vs. Business: Where Do Crypto Traders Fall?
Before we even talk about trader tax status, we need to answer a more fundamental question:
Are you an investor (§212), or are you operating a trade or business (§162)?
Most Crypto Traders = Investors (§212)
If your activity looks like:
- Buying and holding
- Trading occasionally
- Investing for long-term appreciation
Then you are an investor.
Tax treatment:
- Gains and losses = capital
- Expenses = generally not deductible under the current tax law
Some Crypto Traders May Qualify as a Business (§162)
If your activity is:
- Frequent
- Continuous
- High-volume
- Focused on short-term price movements
Then it may rise to the level of a trade or business.
But this is where it gets misunderstood.
Being a “business” does NOT mean you qualify for trader tax status.
2. What It Takes to Be a “Business” as a Crypto Trader
There’s no checklist, it’s based on facts and circumstances.
But in practice, a trader operating at a business level typically:
- Trades most days of the week
- Executes a high volume of transactions
- Spends significant time actively managing trades
- Uses a defined strategy or system
- Treats trading as a primary income-generating activity
Just as important:
It needs to look like a business
That includes:
- Consistent recordkeeping
- Use of tools, software, or analytics
- Separate accounts or wallets for trading
- A repeatable process (not random activity)
And just as importantly — what doesn’t qualify:
- Trading only during bull markets
- Holding positions for long periods
- Having large dollar amounts invested
- Calling yourself a “full-time trader” without the activity to support it
3. Why Crypto Traders Don’t Qualify for Trader Tax Status
This is the part most people get wrong.
Trader tax status (TTS) is tied to:
- Securities (stocks, options)
- Certain commodities
But the IRS has made it clear:
Crypto is treated as property, not a security.
Some traders point out that regulators like CFTC have referred to certain cryptocurrencies as commodities. While that may be true in a regulatory context, it does not automatically translate into tax treatment under Section 475, and there is currently no clear authority allowing crypto traders to claim trader tax status on that basis.
Because of that:
- Crypto trading does not fit within the TTS framework
- You cannot make a Section 475 mark-to-market election
- Your gains and losses remain capital, not ordinary
Even if you trade full-time…
You could be:
- Trading daily
- Generating your primary income from crypto
- Operating in a highly disciplined way
And still:
You are not a “trader” for TTS purposes.
4. The Key Distinction Most Traders Miss
There are two completely separate concepts:
- Trade or business (§162)
- Trader tax status (TTS + §475 election)
For crypto traders:
- You may qualify for #1
- But you generally do not qualify for #2
This distinction drives everything else.
5. What You Can Do: Tax Planning for Crypto Traders
Just because TTS doesn’t apply doesn’t mean you’re stuck.
There are still meaningful ways to improve your tax position, if you approach it correctly.
1. Loss Harvesting (While It Still Works)
Currently, crypto is not subject to wash sale rules.
That means:
- You can realize losses and re-enter positions
- You can actively manage taxable gains
But:
- Timing matters
- Execution matters
- Your data needs to be accurate
2. Get Your Crypto Data Right (This Is Non-Negotiable)
This is the biggest issue we see.
Many traders rely on software and assume:
“No errors = correct report”
That’s not how crypto works.
We regularly see:
- Missing transactions
- Incorrect cost basis
- Broken transfer histories
If your data is wrong:
Your tax return is wrong, regardless of strategy.
3. Consider Business Treatment — Carefully
If your activity rises to a §162 business, you may be able to:
- Deduct ordinary and necessary expenses
(software, subscriptions, advisory fees, etc.)
But:
- Your gains and losses are still capital
- This does not unlock trader tax status
4. Coordinate Across Your Entire Tax Picture
Crypto planning doesn’t happen in isolation.
Opportunities often come from:
- Offsetting gains with other capital losses
- Coordinating with stock trading activity
- Timing income and deductions across years
5. Work with Someone Who Understands Crypto
Crypto tax is not just data entry.
It requires:
- Understanding how transactions actually flow
- Knowing where software breaks
- Applying judgment, not just outputs
This is where most mistakes happen.
Final Thoughts
If you’re an active crypto trader, the goal isn’t to force your situation into a framework that doesn’t apply.
It’s to understand:
- What you are (investor vs. business)
- What you are not (a TTS-qualified trader)
- What strategies actually work under current rules
The difference between “what should work” and “what actually works” is where most tax mistakes happen.