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You should also keep in mind that the ATO reserves the right to cancel a declared policy without notice and prosecute you for attempting to defraud the Commonwealth of Australia.It's not that I don't want to hear it, it's the fact that the ATOs own website has such a nebulous explanation regarding taxation of cryptocurrency that seems to be open to interpretation; there is nothing that clearly or explicitly states that you're required to pay taxes from profits made on coin-to-coin crypto trades. As I said before, I'm more inclined to believe that taxing coin-to-coin trades is unenforceable due to the reasons I outlined in my last post.
You should also keep in mind that the ATO reserves the right to cancel a declared policy without notice and prosecute you for attempting to defraud the Commonwealth of Australia.
There have been people sent to prison after the ATO gave them a ruling, they acted on the ruling, the ruling was changed and they were sent to gaol.
Every transaction that makes a capital gain will be assessed as a gain, but my understanding is that a loss won't be.
And unless your coin exchange torches it's records of transactions you're going to get found.
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Right, so thousands of law-abiding, hard-working australians are going to be sent to gaol for "defrauding the Commonwealth of Australia" because the government decides to cancel a declared policy without notice. They'd better start building some bigger prisons then.
So are coin-to-coin trades classified as a capital gain? That makes no sense. Due to the extreme volatility of cryptocurrencies, exchanging one crypto for another could mean a profit at the time you made the trade, which could later turn into a loss if you just hold the coin. Any coin-to-coin trade you make could literally change from a profit to a loss from one day to the next. In other words, there's no way to actually assess whether or not you've made a profit or a loss on coin-to-coin trades until you actually sell the coin in exchange for fiat currency. And because the only way to cash out cryptocurrency on australian exchanges is by converting whatever altcoin you traded into BTC or Ethereum, then selling it for fiat, I don't think the government even cares what altcoins you hold; they're primarily concerned with bitcoin and ethereum because that's the only way to cash out back into fiat.
Keep seeing this misconception that being taxed on each trade is somehow “double tax”.So crypto is liable to being double taxed? Whilst being crypto & subject to CGT once you convert to AUD?
Keep seeing this misconception that being taxed on each trade is somehow “double tax”.
For the sake of this example let’s assume this all happens in the one financial year and we don’t take into consideration your other income and tax circumstances or the fees involved. Just look at the crypto trades in isolation.
Say you start with AU$1,000. You deposit your money and then buy AU$1000 worth of BTC (let’s say 1 BTC = AU$16,000 at the time).
So you now have 0.0625 BTC (worth AU$1,000)
3 months pass. The price of BTC has jumped and dipped and been all over the place. But as you haven’t traded it in that time there has been no CGT event.
So after that 3 months the exchange rate is now 1 BTC = AU$22,000.
You decide you like the sound of ETH now, which we’ll say at the time is at 1 ETH = AU$1,400.
So 0.0625 BTC for as much ETH as it can get you.
ie. AU$1,375 ($22k x 0.0625btc) worth of ETH @ rate of 1 ETH per AU$1,400. Which is 0.982... ETH.
This trade triggers a CGT event so you need to pay tax on the profit made. So you need to pay tax on AU$375.
2 weeks pass and the price of ETH goes up and down a bit but then comes back to what it was when you purchased (1 ETH = AU$1,400).
You decide to cash out now into $AU. So you receive AU$1,375. This is $375 more than you started with and that is all you pay the tax on. It’s already been counted once when you traded BTC to ETH. So there’s no additional tax paid on your ETH to AUD trade as the profit there had been $0.
The tax is calculated only on the difference between each trade. Not the difference between each trade and then also again between the entry and exit points of fiat currency.
This is why everyone should be keeping a record of all their trades and hiring a tax accountant to do all the math involved.

Bitcoin is, however, an asset for capital gains tax (CGT) purposes.
It definitely sucks. It’s confusing and frustrating because we’re the ones taking the risk while the government refuses to acknowledge it as a currency or worth anything until it suits them (tax time).Since its treated Capital gains asset its also treated for loss.
So judging by many people flooding into the market when Tron was around 30c before it plummeted to 6c there may be a few people able to claim that loss to offset their gains
In all seriousness though, I totally understand why people would not want to pay tax on crypto. Investing their own wages (they already paid tax on) to take a risk (classified by many as one of the riskiest investments available to your common Aussie) on a speculative asset that could be wiped down to absolute zero in an instant in an attempt to try and make some money to bridge the gap between themselves and the rich who know and exploit every tax loophole in the book. Not to mention how this country is using our hard earned that they take in tax?
Tbh I don't blame them.
The ATO website is meant to be just a guide for us plebs apparently. Accountants deal with the yucky tax laws which supposedly go into far more detail. They also deal directly with the ATO when there are grey areas.It's not that I don't want to hear it, it's the fact that the ATOs own website has such a nebulous explanation regarding taxation of cryptocurrency that seems to be open to interpretation; there is nothing that clearly or explicitly states that you're required to pay taxes from profits made on coin-to-coin crypto trades. As I said before, I'm more inclined to believe that taxing coin-to-coin trades is unenforceable due to the reasons I outlined in my last post.
Due to the extreme volatility of cryptocurrencies, exchanging one crypto for another could mean a profit at the time you made the trade, which could later turn into a loss if you just hold the coin. Any coin-to-coin trade you make could literally change from a profit to a loss from one day to the next.
Inother words, there's no way to actually assess whether or not you've made a profit or a loss until you sell the coin in exchange for fiat currency.
That's your problem and the risk you take from being involved in such a volatile market.
Yes there is. Did the value of the asset change from when you acquired it to when you disposed of it? If yes there is your profit or loss.
Every transaction that makes a capital gain will be assessed as a gain, but my understanding is that a loss won't be.
I think I read a few hundred posts back someone said 35% tax on profit dividends if investment withdrawn inside a year but only 15-20% if investment held for 2 yrs or longer ie long term investment ..
Could be BS though ..
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Are you sure? I've seen it written as if you hold if for less than a year you pay tax on 100% of the profit. If you hold it for 12 months or longer then you get a discount and only pay tax on 50% of the profit.CGT is 50% if held for less than a year and 25% if held for longer.
This ^ is correct..Are you sure? I've seen it written as if you hold if for less than a year you pay tax on 100% of the profit. If you hold it for 12 months or longer then you get a discount and only pay tax on 50% of the profit.
It's barely above Dogecoin for market cap, has a ton of potential and a heap of China behind it. Tron is 4x larger, ADA 17x and neither is actually anything. Never too late.Do people think it's too late to get in on waltenchain?