Crypto tax reports and forms
CryptaTax turns your transaction history into the documents you actually file — formatted to your country's forms, and ready to submit yourself or hand to your accountant.
General information, not tax advice. Which forms you file, and how, depends on your country — see your country guide.
The forms and reports
Pick the output you need. The named-form pages cover the US and UK; the generic capital gains and income reports serve every other country and map to your local pages.
- [Schedule D (US) →](/en/crypto-tax-reports/schedule-d/) — your net capital gains and losses, with the Form 8949 detail behind them
- [Capital Gains Summary SA108 (UK) →](/en/crypto-tax-reports/capital-gains-summary-sa108/) — Section 104 pooled figures for your Self Assessment
- [Capital gains report →](/en/crypto-tax-reports/capital-gains-report/) — every disposal with cost basis, proceeds, and gain or loss, totalled
- [Income report →](/en/crypto-tax-reports/income-report/) — staking, mining, airdrops, and rewards valued at receipt
How it works
Import your exchanges and wallets, and CryptaTax matches every disposal to the right acquisition lot, applies your country's cost-basis method, and produces each report with the full transaction detail behind every figure. UK Section 104 pooling, Canada ACB, and France PFU are applied automatically where they apply — not menu picks.
Explore the engine: Crypto tax calculator → · Crypto tax by country → · Import your exchanges & wallets →
FAQ
Real, named outputs include the US Schedule D (with Form 8949 detail) and the UK Capital Gains Summary (SA108), plus complete capital gains and income reports that map to your local pages for every other country.
It depends where you file. The US uses Schedule D and Form 8949; the UK uses SA108; elsewhere you typically use your local capital gains and income pages, which the generic reports feed.
Yes. Every report is complete and country-aware, with the full transaction detail behind it, so you can file yourself or hand it over.