Key Notes
- The CARF rules took effect on January 1, 2026 in 48 jurisdictions.
- Exchanges must register tax identification numbers and transaction data immediately, while cross-border sharing begins in May 2027.
- Smaller exchanges face consolidation risks due to high compliance costs.
The era of perceived tax anonymity for crypto assets is over. As of January 1, 2026, a coordinated global tax reporting regime, the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF), is officially in force. Crypto service providers in an initial 48 countries must now begin collecting detailed data on user transactions for possible submission to tax authorities.
The framework, developed by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and supported by the G20, requires exchanges, brokers and certain digital asset service providers to implement new due diligence procedures. These companies must now identify the tax residence of their customers and record their crypto transactions, including exchanges between crypto and fiat, transactions between crypto-assets and certain transfers.
“The CARF provides for the automatic exchange of tax information on crypto-assets and was developed to address the rapid growth of the crypto-asset market and to ensure that recent gains in global tax transparency are not gradually eroded,” the OECD states in its official documentation.
Data collection for calendar year 2026 is ongoing. The first automatic exchange of this information between international tax authorities is expected to begin in 2027. The first block of participating jurisdictions includes the United Kingdom and the member states of the European Union.
Industry response
Compliance offices at major sites like Coinbase and Kraken have been preparing for this change for 18 months. The operational burden is immense. Smaller exchanges, unable to bear the cost of a CARF-compliant reporting infrastructure, would have to fold or merge.
This framework effectively aligns the digital assets sector with the transparency standards of traditional finance, reflecting the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) that governs banks. For trading desks and institutional players, CARF introduces an unavoidable new layer of compliance costs.
This eliminates the viability of using non-U.S. exchanges as a method of hiding gains and complicates cross-border transactions. Standardizing reporting is a double-edged sword. While creating clear operational rules, it also provides global tax agencies with a powerful and unified enforcement tool, increasing audit risk for all market participants.
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