Crypto capital gains report
CryptaTax turns your full transaction history into a clear capital gains report — every disposal, with its cost basis, proceeds, and resulting gain or loss, totalled and ready for your country's tax return.
General information, not tax advice. How gains are taxed depends on your country — see your country guide.
What's in the report
For every taxable disposal — selling for fiat, swapping one coin for another, or spending crypto — the report shows:
- the asset, date acquired, and date disposed,
- the proceeds and the cost basis (using your country's method),
- the gain or loss, split into short-term and long-term where your country distinguishes them,
- and the totals for the year.
It applies the right cost-basis method for where you file — for example, FIFO, UK Section 104 pooling, or a proportional method — automatically, so the numbers match your local rules rather than a method you have to pick by hand. → Crypto tax by country →
How you use it
- File it as the basis of your return, or hand it to your accountant.
- Map it to your country's form — for the US that's Schedule D (with Form 8949 detail); for the UK, the SA108 Capital Gains Summary; elsewhere, your local capital gains pages. → Schedule D → · SA108 →
Generate it with CryptaTax
Import your exchanges and wallets, and CryptaTax matches every disposal to the right acquisition lots, applies your country's cost-basis method, and produces the report with the underlying detail behind every figure.
→ Import your exchanges & wallets →
FAQ
Every disposal with its date acquired, date sold, proceeds, cost basis, and gain or loss, plus totals for the year — using your country's cost-basis method.
Yes. It applies the method your country requires (such as FIFO, Section 104 pooling, or a proportional method) automatically, so the figures match your local rules.
Yes. It's a complete, country-aware report with the full transaction detail behind it.
That depends on your country — Schedule D (with Form 8949) in the US, SA108 in the UK, or your local capital gains pages. See your country guide.