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The Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) is a global tax transparency standard developed by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). It requires crypto-asset service providers, like exchanges, brokers, and certain wallet providers, to collect and report customer information to tax authorities. This information is then shared across jurisdictions under international agreements, similar to how the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) works for traditional financial accounts.
Implementation timelines vary by country. The OECD released CARF in 2022, and many jurisdictions are now adopting legislation to enforce it, with reporting expected to begin in 2026 in several major economies (EU (DAC 8), the UK, etc.).
We will provide updates as your jurisdiction finalizes its rules.
CARF was introduced to address the fact that crypto transactions can cross borders easily and may not always be reported for tax purposes.
The OECD designed CARF to:
CARF applies to:
If you are our client, we may need to collect additional information (for example: tax residency(ies) and TIN(s)) and report certain transactions to tax authorities.
CARF covers a wide range of crypto assets, including:
Under CARF, exchanges and other providers may be required to report:
Transaction data: Purchases, sales, exchanges, transfers, and certain payments made in crypto assets.
We do not report individual transactions. Instead, transactions for CARF reporting are aggregated based on the following principles: Core Aggregation Rules.
All transactions are aggregated by:
Crypto-Asset, and
Transaction Direction, i.e., whether the transaction represents an inward or outward movement of the relevant crypto-asset.
Aggregation is performed across the reporting period and under the three transaction groupings described below:
Exchanges Between Crypto-Assets and Fiat Currencies
Transactions involving exchanges between a crypto-asset and a fiat currency are aggregated by:
Crypto-asset,
Fiat currency,
and Transaction direction (inward vs. outward from the perspective of the crypto-asset).
Example:
If an account includes the following activity:
BTC purchased with USD
BTC sold for USD
SOL sold for USD
The aggregations would be reported as:
Aggregate of all BTC purchased with USD (crypto-asset inward)
Aggregate of all BTC sold for USD (crypto-asset outward)
Aggregate of all SOL sold for USD (crypto-asset outward)
Each aggregation is reported separately.
Exchanges Between One or More Relevant Crypto-Assets
Transactions involving exchanges between crypto-assets are aggregated by:
Crypto-asset pair, and
Transaction direction (inward vs. outward for the relevant crypto-asset).
Example:
If an account includes:
BTC purchased with ETH
BTC sold for ETH
SOL sold for BTC
The aggregations would be reported as:
Aggregate of all BTC purchased with ETH (BTC inward)
Aggregate of all BTC sold for ETH (BTC outward)
Aggregate of all SOL sold for BTC (SOL outward)
Each crypto-pair and direction is aggregated and reported independently.
Transfers of Relevant Crypto-Assets
Crypto-asset transfers are aggregated by:
Crypto-asset,
Transfer direction (inward or outward), and
Transfer category.
Transfer-in categories (examples):
Airdrops
Staking rewards
Transfers from another exchange
Transfer-out categories (examples):
Transfers to another exchange
Other outbound transfers
We submit the required data to our local tax authority based on the exchange providing you with services, which then shares it with other countries’ tax authorities where you may be a tax resident.
CARF and CRS will work in parallel, with some integration to avoid duplication.
You may be asked to:
No. CARF is a reporting framework, not a tax itself. Your local tax authority will obtain the reported information and may compare this against information you have reported.
CARF reporting follows strict data protection and security protocols. Your information is only shared with government authorities under established international agreements. We do not share your personal data with third parties outside of legal obligations.