Cryptocurrency Tax NZ

Keeping Cryptocurrency Tax Records

You need to keep records for your cryptocurrency activity.

Having a system for keeping accurate tax records, and storing them in an organised way will make it more efficient to prepare financial statements, answer queries from IRD, provide information to banks or other corporations and meet anti-money laundering (AML) requirements such as proof of wealth.

This article outlines:

It can be difficult to show evidence of ownership and keep records due to the nature of cryptocurrency – being decentralised and digital. Cryptocurrency exchanges keep limited records. CSV files can be adjusted or manipulated. IRD will accept an ANZ bank statement showing a closing balance and transaction history as evidence of $NZD on hand, spent and received. In comparison, decentralisation does not allow for verification from an organisation with a higher trust. It is more difficult for IRD to accept that exchange records are an actual taxpayers trading history, or a digital wallet belongs to the owner.

Why you need to keep records

It is a legal obligation to keep accounting and tax records for seven years. IRD can ask for this information.

Accounting records show evidence of transactions and create a timeline of activity; initial $NZD used to acquire cryptocurrency and what has happened with that cryptocurrency; traded, held in which wallet, staked, still own on hand (hodl), or sold back to $NZD.

Keeping accounting records for a non-crypto business is similar. They keep records of stock purchased, completed a stock take at the end of each financial year, store bank statements, invoices and record their sales. Their sales may be further broken down into which branch, or method of sale (online or retail), and even by which salesperson.  

What records to keep

Original acquisition of cryptocurrency show how you first acquired cryptocurrency – a purchase of cryptocurrency from a cryptocurrency retailer such as Easy Crypto or BitPrime with $NZD.

Records to keep:

If the original acquisition was received as a gift from a friend or family member, make a note of who gifted it, date received, type and amount received. There are taxable implications on gifting and/or receiving cryptocurrency which we have previously outlined.

Sale and trades of cryptocurrency are taxable events and need to be captured. Keep accurate records to show what has happened with each cryptocurrency token. Do you still own it? Has it been sold? If sold, what date was it sold? What exchange was it sold on? Was it sold for $NZD, or did you receive another token in exchange? Trading a cryptocurrency token for another is a taxable event and needs to be captured for tax purposes.

Records to keep:

Cryptocurrency trades:

Sale of cryptocurrency to $NZD:

Cryptocurrency on hand. Keep records of cryptocurrency owned. You probably know how much you have and where it is stored, especially if it is valuable. However, it is surprising that some people do not know what tokens they own, where they are stored, or the quantity of each token they own.

Records to keep:

ICO Purchases. Participating in an ICO normally occur off exchanges. A manual record will be required.

Records to keep:

Expenses Paid.  Traders may have expenses such as training courses, books, seminars, or subscriptions to carry on their trading business. In most situations these expenses will be paid online via a credit card and a receipt is received. If expenses are paid in cryptocurrency there is further information administration steps required to capture the transactions.

Records to keep:

Transfers between wallets, or from wallets to an exchange. A transfer between wallets, or from one exchange to a wallet is not a taxable activity; however, we recommend keeping records that show the movement. Similarly, a transfer of $NZD from one bank account to another bank account (say from a transactional account to a savings account in internet banking), does not change the nature or ownership. It retains its ownership status (provided the same owner owns both accounts) and nature (it is not changing to another token or changing in substance).

Records to keep:

Creating a system for keeping records

We recommend creating a system for keeping cryptocurrency records. By implementing a system throughout the year, the end of year tax process will be more efficient. It will also take less of our time (as accountants), which will result in lower accounting fees.

The system implemented will depend on your own activity. If trading more frequently, more regular checks may be appropriate. Adapt the system based on your specific activity.

You may do something now (such as transfer cryptocurrency to a staking wallet), and need to recall these details in 18 months-time (when preparing your tax return), or even four years later (should IRD review your tax return). You need to be able to recall the specific events and details of your activity.

We recommend:

Storage

We recommend storing your cryptocurrency records using:

Contact Us

Contact Tim Doyle (tim@agbizaccountants.co.nz) for a no obligation call or meeting to discuss any cryptocurrency tax or accounting questions. Our office is in Cambridge, Waikato, or we can arrange a video or telephone call.

This material has been prepared for informational purposes only, and is not intended to provide, and should not be relied on for, tax, legal or accounting advice. You should consult your own tax, legal and accounting advisors before engaging in any transaction.