Refusing new IRS crypto tax forms could cost you your exchange account


Log in to Coinbase next tax season, and your tax documents might no longer arrive by mail.

Under a new IRS proposal, crypto exchanges could be required to file Form 1099-DA electronically. This form reports digital asset trades, and could refuse to do business with customers who decline to provide it.

The comment period closes May 5, and if finalized, the rule would shift crypto tax reporting from the mailbox to the platform.

This is not a tax cut or a rollback of reporting requirements. Brokers still send identical information to the IRS regardless of how they deliver forms to customers. The proposal permits exchanges to make app-based delivery mandatory.

The result: millions of crypto users would receive tax forms exclusively through email and in-app document centers, with no paper backup and no right to switch back.

The twist: crypto taxes are not getting lighter. They are getting quieter.

What actually changes

The IRS proposal creates an alternative electronic delivery process for Form 1099-DA.

Under current rules, brokers must offer customers paper forms. The proposal would allow exchanges to use streamlined consent, where customers agree to electronic delivery during account setup, and exchanges could terminate relationships with anyone who refuses.

Consent would likely appear as a pop-up with an “I agree” button, with language indicating the broker may not continue servicing customers who decline.

Once customers consent, exchanges would not be required to let them withdraw that consent while remaining customers. The only guaranteed paper fallback would be a notice if email delivery fails, not the full tax document.

Delivery would happen via posting forms to an online document center with email notification or via a direct email attachment.

Exchanges must maintain access through Oct. 15 of the following year and retain prior statements for seven years. Undeliverable email triggers a physical notice within 30 days, but that is procedural, not a substitute for the mail cue many users expect.

Topic What changes vs what doesn’t
Broker reporting to government No change — IRS still receives the data
Customer delivery method Changes — can be app/email only
Paper option required May disappear — no mandatory paper alternative
Refuse e-delivery Possible account termination
Withdraw e-consent later Not required to be allowed
Where you find the form Document center / email attachment
Access window Through Oct. 15 of following year
Retention 7 years available upon request
If email fails Paper notice within 30 days (notice, not the full form)

The bigger enforcement shift

This proposal sits inside a larger compliance buildout.

Starting with transactions on or after Jan. 1, 2025, crypto brokers must file Form 1099-DA reporting gross proceeds.

Crypto tax reporting
Timeline shows crypto tax reporting phases in from January 2025 through potential 2027 consumer impact of electronic-only delivery.

Basis reporting, cost information needed to calculate gains and losses, phases in for certain transactions starting Jan. 1, 2026, only for covered assets acquired from and held with the same broker.

The enforcement math is significant. A Government Accountability Office report found that the IRS Automated Underreporter program identified potential underreported income in over 1 million cases, totaling $6.6 billion, in fiscal 2023.

Form 1099-DA feeds that match the matching engine. An IRS research paper found 6.5% of individuals, 17.4 million people, reported cryptocurrency sales from 2013 through 2021, while external surveys suggested 12% to 21% of US adults owned crypto.

The gap implies many holders never appear in sales reporting.

The Joint Committee on Taxation estimated digital asset reporting provisions would raise roughly $28 billion over 10 years. The IRS cites an internal study estimating that up to 75% of taxpayers with digital assets are noncompliant.

The electronic delivery proposal is not about easing burdens. It is about standardizing infrastructure for automated compliance.

What retail users would notice

The user experience shifts from annual paper envelopes to persistent digital workflows. Tax season becomes a document-center notification rather than a mailbox event.

For users accustomed to physical forms as their filing reminder, the shift creates new ways to miss deadlines.

Exchanges would integrate consent into onboarding or account settings, presented as routine platform terms. Email delivery relies on users maintaining current contact information and checking spam filters.

In-app document centers blend tax forms into notification streams that handle trade confirmations, security alerts, and promotions. The seven-year retention requirement means historical forms remain accessible, but only if users know to look for them.

Coinbase’s 2025 10-K reports 9.2 million monthly transacting users and $376 billion in assets on the platform. Other major exchanges have comparable scale.

If even a fraction of tax documents adopt mandatory electronic consent, the volume of tax documents moving exclusively through digital channels becomes substantial.

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