Starting January 1st, the UK and more than 40 countries have rolled out the OECD's Cryptoasset Reporting Framework (CARF), marking a major shift in how crypto activity gets tracked globally. Here's what it means: major exchanges operating in these jurisdictions now have to collect detailed transaction data and tax residency information from their users and report everything to local tax authorities like HMRC in the UK. This isn't just about one country tightening rules—it's a coordinated international effort to bring crypto reporting standards in line with traditional financial oversight. For traders and platform users, it essentially means your exchange will be passing along your transaction history and tax status to regulators. The framework aims to close gaps in tax compliance across borders, so crypto adoption and legitimate trading activity is increasingly operating under the same reporting requirements as stocks, forex, and other assets.
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FUDwatcher
· 01-01 11:48
Now I really can't play anymore, privacy is gone
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MysteryBoxAddict
· 01-01 11:44
Damn... Another wave of strict regulation, now all trading income will obediently report data.
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DuskSurfer
· 01-01 11:37
Privacy is gone, and the exchange directly sells us to the tax authorities.
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ApeDegen
· 01-01 11:24
Damn, more than 40 countries are monitoring our transaction records, there's really no way to escape now.
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MetaverseHomeless
· 01-01 11:24
Privacy is gone, and the exchange directly sells us to the tax authorities...
Starting January 1st, the UK and more than 40 countries have rolled out the OECD's Cryptoasset Reporting Framework (CARF), marking a major shift in how crypto activity gets tracked globally. Here's what it means: major exchanges operating in these jurisdictions now have to collect detailed transaction data and tax residency information from their users and report everything to local tax authorities like HMRC in the UK. This isn't just about one country tightening rules—it's a coordinated international effort to bring crypto reporting standards in line with traditional financial oversight. For traders and platform users, it essentially means your exchange will be passing along your transaction history and tax status to regulators. The framework aims to close gaps in tax compliance across borders, so crypto adoption and legitimate trading activity is increasingly operating under the same reporting requirements as stocks, forex, and other assets.