If you’re holding crypto and investing in real estate, your 2025 taxes (due in 2026) could either save you serious money or blow up your return.
The IRS has implemented new rules that reshape how crypto capital gains tax is calculated, how your cost basis must be tracked across capital assets, and how every crypto transaction flows straight onto your tax return. And if you’re using crypto for rental income, down payments, or staking proceeds to cover your mortgage, those moves now carry even higher tax stakes.
These changes impact your capital gains, ordinary income, real estate investment tax deductions, and your audit exposure.
Before you move another coin, watch the full video breakdown here.
What Changed in Crypto Tax Law for 2025 & Why Does It Matter?
2025 marks the first year that centralized exchanges, such as Coinbase and Binance, must file Form 1099-DA—a new IRS document specifically designed to track cryptocurrency transactions.
These 1099 forms disclose gross proceeds from your trades. While they don’t yet provide your cost basis, they give the IRS enough information to identify mismatches, question reporting, and potentially trigger penalties.
The IRS crypto rules now align more closely with rules applied to stock trader tax strategies and traditional securities.
However, unlike stocks—where brokers track your cost basis—crypto traders must still determine cost basis manually until 2026. That means every transaction you make in 2025 affects your future capital gain or loss, and the IRS expects precise tracking.
The biggest shift relates to how the basis must now be tracked:
Pooled accounting is out
Wallet-by-wallet tracking is in
If you move digital assets between wallets, your basis follows the tokens. If you don’t track that movement, the IRS may treat those tokens as if they had no basis—meaning your crypto capital gains tax could skyrocket.
Congress also reversed the expansion of decentralized exchange reporting. Platforms like Uniswap count as brokers, but they do not send Forms 1099. That places all tax obligations—and risks—squarely on the investor.
This is where complexity increases. Whether you’re investing, trading, or buying real estate with crypto, these records now drive your tax implications. Misreporting can lead to overstated gains, underreported income, or increased audit exposure due to cryptocurrency tax errors.
How Do These IRS Crypto Rules Affect Real Estate Investors Specifically?
Real estate investors today are using crypto in ways that would’ve seemed unrealistic ten years ago:
Transferring crypto directly to a seller for a down payment
Accepting rent in cryptocurrency
Using staking proceeds to cover mortgages
Leveraging crypto gains to purchase property
But the IRS treats cryptocurrency like property, not currency, and these rule changes fundamentally shift how the IRS is taxing crypto across every type of transaction. Whenever you use, sell, gift, or transfer it, you create a potential capital gain or loss.
This matters because many investors assume they won’t trigger tax if no cash changes hands. The opposite is true. The IRS considers the fair market value of the cryptocurrency on the day of transfer. And if that value exceeds your basis, the difference becomes either:
Short-term capital gains, if held under 12 months
Long-term capital gains, if held more than 12 months
These capital gains tax rates can significantly change your liability. Investors generally prefer long-term rates because they are taxed at lower rates than ordinary income tax rates. But real estate investors often move crypto quickly, turning what could’ve been a favorable long-term gain into a higher-tax short-term capital gain.
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Is Buying Real Estate With Cryptocurrency a Taxable Event?
Yes—and this is the rule that catches the most investors off guard. Buying property with digital assets is one of the most common ways investors are using crypto for real estate, but it’s also one of the easiest ways to trigger unexpected tax consequences.
Imagine purchasing a $350,000 rental property and using $100,000 in Bitcoin as your down payment. If your basis in that Bitcoin was $60,000, you’ve just triggered a $40,000 capital gain.
You didn’t sell the crypto.You didn’t convert it to the United States Dollar (USD).You simply transferred it.
But to the IRS, a transfer is a taxable disposition because you exchanged one form of property (crypto) for another (real estate).
Your tax implications are determined by:
Your holding period
Your basis in the cryptocurrency
The property’s transaction value
At a 20% long-term capital gain rate, that transfer creates an $8,000 tax liability. If it’s short-term capital gains instead, you may pay tax at your ordinary income tax rate—which could be far higher depending on your tax bracket.
How Do You Reduce the Tax Impact When Buying Real Estate With Crypto?
You can choose to transfer coins from a wallet with a higher basis, reducing the taxable spread.
Example:
Wallet A basis: $60,000
Wallet B basis: $90,000
If you send Bitcoin from wallet B for your $100,000 down payment, your taxable gain drops from $40,000 to $10,000.
This is one of the core IRS crypto rules real estate investors overlook. Wallet selection becomes a tax planning tool, similar to the way stock trader tax strategies use lot selection to control capital gains.
What Happens When You Receive Rent in Cryptocurrency?
Accepting rent in crypto creates ordinary income, the same way rent paid in dollars would. You report rental income based on the fair market value of the crypto at the moment you receive it.
If you accept $2,000 in crypto as rent:
You recognize $2,000 of rental income
You establish $2,000 of cost basis in the coin
Any future appreciation becomes capital gain
If that same coin later grows to $4,000 and you use it to buy supplies or invest elsewhere, you’ve created a $2,000 capital gain. Whether that is short-term or long-term depends on how long you held the coin after receiving it.
This is where real estate investment tax deductions can help reduce your taxable income—but only if your reporting is clean.
Are Staking Proceeds Taxable When Used for Real Estate Expenses?
Yes. And this is one of the most misunderstood areas of cryptocurrency tax.
When you earn staking rewards, the IRS treats those rewards as ordinary income, just like interest or wages. It does not matter whether you convert the crypto into fiat. Your tax implications depend on:
The fair market value of the staking rewards when received
Your income tax rate
Your holding period after receipt
If you use staking proceeds to pay your mortgage or reinvest in property, the IRS treats it as if you received income in dollars and then used those dollars to pay your expenses. If the crypto later increases in value, that increase becomes capital gains tax when disposed of.
Many investors fail to set aside cash to cover these taxes and end up blindsided at tax time. The bottom line: staking rewards create income whether or not you cash out. And future gains create additional taxable events.

How Can You Stay Audit-Proof Under the New IRS Crypto Rules?
The IRS is expanding crypto enforcement. With 1099-DA reporting, they now have enough data to identify inconsistencies, missing income, and questionable basis reporting. To stay protected, you need disciplined tracking:
Track basis wallet-by-wallet
Log every transfer
Time-stamp rent received
Record staking values
Store transaction fees
Document the fair market value of crypto on every taxable event
If your recordkeeping is incomplete, the IRS may conclude your crypto has zero basis, which means 100% of the disposal is taxable—a costly assumption.
This is why tax professionals now group crypto management into the same complexity level as stock trader tax strategies. To stay compliant, your data needs to be as good as the IRS expects.
Can You Use Loss Harvesting to Reduce Crypto Capital Gains Tax in 2025?
Yes, and this remains one of the most effective tax benefits available to crypto investors.
Because there is still no wash sale rule for crypto, you can:
Sell a losing crypto asset
Recognize the capital loss
Immediately repurchase it
This loss offsets:
Loss harvesting becomes especially important when you use crypto to purchase real estate, because you may need losses to offset the gains created during transfers.
Losses reduce both short-term and long-term capital gains, depending on which gains you create during the year.
What Steps Should Crypto-Focused Real Estate Investors Take Now?
Here’s your actionable 2025 checklist:
Track cost basis for every wallet
Time-stamp all rent paid in crypto
Treat staking rewards as income immediately
Use high-basis wallets when buying real estate with crypto
Set aside cash to cover tax on staking proceeds
Use loss harvesting to offset gains
Consider entity structuring to manage crypto and real estate activities
Track all crypto used for products or services
Calculate both short-term and long-term capital gains accurately
Your tax implications depend heavily on documentation, timing, and how you combine crypto activity with your real estate business.
Should You Get Professional Help Navigating Crypto and Real Estate Tax Rules?
If your investing involves both real estate and cryptocurrency, the rules aren’t getting easier. The IRS is tightening enforcement, and penalties for misreporting can be steep. The bottom line: specialized guidance can reduce risk and optimize your tax outcomes.
A properly structured plan can help you:
Reduce crypto capital gains tax
Protect assets
Optimize long-term capital gains rates
Capture real estate investment tax deductions
Reduce taxable income through entity planning
Maximize tax benefits under current law
Schedule your free 45-minute Strategy Session with an Anderson Senior Advisor and build a tax plan that works for both your real estate portfolio and your crypto investments.




















