Crypto in your portfolio? Experts share key disclosures and compliance tips for ITR filing
AI Summary
As tax authorities increasingly utilize technology for verification, accurate reporting of crypto transactions is crucial for investors to avoid complications during tax filing. Experts emphasize the importance of maintaining detailed records across exchanges and wallets, as well as selecting the correct ITR forms to ensure compliance with tax obligations. Investors should treat tax filing as a reconciliation process and be diligent in documenting all transactions, including those involving token rewards and airdrops.
With tax authorities relying more on technology-driven verification, experts say accurate reporting of every crypto transaction is becoming increasingly important.
From selecting the correct ITR form to maintaining transaction records across exchanges and wallets, investors need to pay close attention to disclosures to avoid notices and ensure smooth tax filing.
While most crypto investors are aware that gains from Virtual Digital Assets (VDAs) attract a flat 30% tax and are subject to specific reporting requirements, experts say the bigger challenge now lies in filing accurate and complete disclosures.
According to Pranav Pagaria, SVP - Finance & Strategy, CoinDCX, investors often make the mistake of focusing only on profitable trades while ignoring other reportable transactions.
“As tax reporting becomes increasingly technology-driven, even small inconsistencies across records can lead to avoidable follow-up queries. Investors should therefore treat crypto tax filing as a reconciliation exercise rather than simply a tax payment obligation,” Pagaria added.
Pagaria said investors who trade across multiple exchanges or transfer assets to self-custody wallets should maintain a proper audit trail, even if wallet-to-wallet transfers themselves may not be taxable events.
“Most exchanges now provide downloadable transaction statements and tax reports that help reconcile trades executed during the financial year. Using these records significantly reduces the possibility of reporting errors, particularly for investors with high trading frequency or diversified crypto portfolios,” he mentioned.
He added that investors should review all transactions executed during the relevant financial year, especially those carried out close to the year-end, as these are often overlooked during tax filing.
Pagaria further noted that documentation becomes even more important for investors who have received token rewards, airdrops or blockchain-based incentives.
“Maintaining detailed records of how assets were acquired, transferred and eventually disposed of becomes increasingly important for accurate reporting. Investors should also preserve exchange statements, wallet records and transaction confirmations even after filing their returns,” he added.
Prateek Gupta, Head of Business, Mudrex, highlighted that selecting the wrong ITR form remains one of the most common mistakes among crypto investors.
“ITR-1 and ITR-4 cannot be used when you have income from crypto or NFTs. You need ITR-2 for investment gains or ITR-3 where crypto trading constitutes business income, and Schedule VDA must be filled transaction-wise, not as a lump sum,” he added.
Gupta also stressed the importance of reconciling the tax deducted at source (TDS) reflected by exchanges with Form 26AS and the Annual Information Statement (AIS) before filing the return.
“Mismatches between Schedule VDA and Form 26AS are a leading cause of defective return notices. Staking rewards, airdrops, and mining income are taxable as income upon receipt at slab rates, and when you later sell the received crypto, the profit is taxed again at 30%,” he explained.
Gupta pointed out that the ITR-U, under Section 139(8A) of the Income Tax Act, allows taxpayers to voluntarily correct returns filed for up to four previous financial years.
Original Article
Published on Livemint