Coinhako tax: your Singapore crypto taxes, sorted
Working out your Coinhako tax? Coinhako is a long-running Singapore-based exchange, focused on spot trading for the Singapore and wider Asian market. The defining factor is that you are filing in Singapore, so the genuine work is a complete, correctly-classified record to which your local rules apply. This guide explains what Coinhako provides, how to export your full history, and how CryptaTax turns it into a Singapore-ready report. General information, not tax advice.
General information, not tax advice. What Coinhako reports and which documents it offers can change and varies by country — verify against Coinhako and your local tax authority or a qualified advisor.

Does Coinhako report your crypto to the tax authorities?
Whether Coinhako shares data with your tax authority depends on your country and changes over time, so do not treat “they won't know” as a plan. Exchanges are increasingly inside information-reporting frameworks that push account and transaction data to tax authorities, and that net is widening, not narrowing. The safe approach is to assume your Coinhako activity is visible and to report it correctly — which is exactly what a clean, reconciled Coinhako tax report lets you do.
Whatever Coinhako does or does not file on your behalf, the legal duty to report your gains and income is yours. That is why getting your full history out of Coinhako and reconciling it properly matters more than whether a particular summary lands in your inbox.
What Coinhako tax documents you can get
Like most exchanges, Coinhako can hand you raw data and sometimes summaries, but it generally cannot produce your final tax numbers — because it only sees what happened on Coinhako, not the coins you moved in from a wallet or another exchange. From your account you can usually obtain:
- a transaction history export (CSV or similar) covering your activity, deposits and withdrawals;
- an order / trade history showing each fill with its fees;
- sometimes a gain/loss or account summary, whose accuracy still depends on whether your full cost-basis picture is present — which on a single exchange it rarely is.
The catch with anything Coinhako generates on its own is cost basis and scope. If you sent coins to Coinhako that you bought elsewhere, Coinhako does not know what you paid, so any gain it shows can be wrong. Reliable numbers come from combining your Coinhako history with every other wallet and exchange you use — the job CryptaTax does.
Types of Coinhako activity and how each is taxed
A single Coinhako account usually mixes several kinds of activity, and each is taxed differently. Sorting your history into these buckets is most of the battle — the sections below cover the Coinhako-specific ones in full.
Spot trades
Each spot sale or coin-to-coin trade is a disposal — proceeds minus cost basis. Buying with dollars sets the basis; it is not taxable by itself.
Rewards and staking
Where you earn rewards or stake on Coinhako, they are generally income at their value on receipt, then carried forward as basis.
Deposits, withdrawals and transfers
Moving your own coins in or out of Coinhako is a transfer, not a sale, but both legs must be matched.
Doing your Singapore crypto tax with Coinhako
The dominant factor in your Coinhako tax is Singapore, which has its own approach to crypto. The exact treatment depends on your circumstances, so the practical job is to compile a complete, correctly-classified record of your Coinhako activity and apply Singapore's rules to it. See the Singapore crypto tax guide for how the rules work, and let CryptaTax assemble the figures they need.
Because reporting hinges on accurate totals across everything you did, a partial export is the main risk: cost basis depends on your full history, and any coins you moved in from another platform carry a basis Coinhako never saw. CryptaTax consolidates Coinhako with your other wallets and exchanges so the numbers reflect your whole position, not just the Coinhako slice.
Combining Coinhako with your other accounts
A Singapore return is built on your whole position, not just Coinhako. Coins moved in from another platform carry a basis Coinhako never saw, and activity on a second exchange or an on-chain wallet is invisible to it. CryptaTax consolidates Coinhako with every other wallet and exchange you use, matches the transfers between them, and values everything in Singapore dollars, so your record reflects your complete history rather than one venue's slice — which matters because Singapore treats different kinds of crypto activity differently.
Whatever the local rules turn out to be, the foundation is the same: a complete record valued in dollars, with your own transfers matched and every disposal measured against the right cost basis. That is rarely something a spreadsheet handles well once you use more than one venue or a wallet, because the activity spans accounts and the values move constantly — a missed transfer or a mis-valued swap quietly distorts everything that follows.
CryptaTax keeps that reconciled, dollars-valued record across Coinhako and every other wallet and exchange you use, classifying each event and carrying cost basis through transfers, so when you come to file there is nothing left to reconstruct — just figures you can stand behind. Singapore is the angle; a clean record is what makes any return defensible.
How to export your full Coinhako transaction history
You have two ways to get your data out, and the choice mainly affects how much manual work is left over:
- API connection (recommended) — create a read-only API key in your Coinhako account and connect it to CryptaTax. This pulls your history automatically and keeps it current, with no spreadsheets to download each time.
- CSV export — download your history from Coinhako and import it. This works everywhere but is a snapshot, so you repeat it whenever you trade again.
Whichever you choose, make sure the export covers your entire time on Coinhako, not just the current tax year. Cost basis depends on when you first acquired each coin, so a partial history produces partial — and usually wrong — numbers.
Common Coinhako reconciliation issues
Most wrong Coinhako tax figures come from a handful of recurring problems. Knowing them up front saves hours of clean-up:
- Transfers in and out of Coinhako — moving your own coins between Coinhako, a wallet or another platform is not a sale, but naive tools record it as one and invent a gain. Both legs must be matched.
- Missing cost basis — coins bought elsewhere and sold on Coinhako have no basis in the Coinhako export alone; the basis has to come from the source.
- Fees — trading and withdrawal fees affect your gain and must be attributed correctly.
- Partial history — Singapore reporting needs your full record; cost basis depends on it.
- Transfers to your own wallets — must be matched, not booked as sales.
How CryptaTax does your Coinhako taxes for you
CryptaTax connects your Coinhako account alongside every other wallet and exchange you use, then does the reconciliation the export cannot:
- Import your complete Coinhako history by read-only API or CSV.
- Match transfers between Coinhako and your other accounts so they are not taxed as disposals.
- Classify trades, rewards and conversions and rebuild cost basis across every source using a consistent method.
- Produce a report — capital gains and income — ready to file or hand to your accountant, with each figure traceable to its source transaction.
The result is one set of numbers for your whole portfolio, with Coinhako as one input among many, rather than a stack of exports you stitch together by hand. Import your exchanges and wallets → · Crypto tax calculator →
Why your Coinhako numbers are only part of the picture
It bears repeating because it is the root of most errors: Coinhako can only ever report on what happened inside Coinhako. The moment you move coins to a wallet, trade on a second exchange, or earn rewards on-chain, your true tax position spans sources none of them sees in full. A figure that looks authoritative on a Coinhako statement can still be wrong for your return, simply because Coinhako is missing context it never had. CryptaTax treats Coinhako as one feed among many and reconciles across all of them, which is the only way to get a number that holds up.
Setting up the Coinhako connection safely
When you connect Coinhako to any tax tool, use a read-only API key. A read-only key lets the tool see your history but cannot trade, withdraw or move funds — so even if it leaked, your assets are safe. A few sensible habits:
- create the key with read-only / view permissions only — never enable trading or withdrawals;
- if Coinhako offers IP allow-listing, restrict the key where practical;
- name the key so you remember what it is for, and revoke it if you stop using the tool;
- prefer the API connection over emailed CSVs, which can sit unencrypted in your inbox.
CryptaTax only ever needs to read your Coinhako history to do the maths; it never needs the ability to move your funds, and you stay in full control of your account.
Mistakes to avoid with your Coinhako taxes
- Only exporting the current year — cost basis depends on your full history on Coinhako.
- Trusting a single gain/loss summary blindly — it cannot know the basis of coins you moved in from elsewhere.
- Ignoring transfers — your own moves in and out of Coinhako are not sales; treat them as transfers or you will overpay.
- Filing without your other accounts — coins moved in from elsewhere carry a basis Coinhako never saw.
- Treating a coin-to-coin swap as non-taxable — in most countries it is a disposal.
Your Coinhako tax checklist
- export or connect your full Coinhako history, from your first transaction;
- connect every other wallet and exchange so transfers can be matched;
- keep a clean, dollars-valued record of your full Coinhako history;
- check how Singapore's rules apply (see the Singapore guide);
- apply a consistent cost-basis method allowed in your country;
- produce a report where every figure traces back to a source transaction.
Work through that list once and your Coinhako taxes stop being a guess. CryptaTax does every step of it for you, turning a year of Coinhako activity into numbers you can stand behind.
Other exchanges and wallets
Use more than one venue? That is the norm, and it is exactly why an exchange's own numbers fall short. Connect each one so your report covers everything: Binance, Kraken, Coinbase, OKX, or see the full integrations list.
FAQ
It depends on your country and changes over time. Exchanges are increasingly inside information-reporting frameworks, and the trend is toward more data-sharing, not less. Assume your Coinhako activity is visible and report it correctly.
Usually a transaction history export and a trade history, and sometimes an account or gain/loss summary. Any summary Coinhako produces can be wrong for coins you moved in from elsewhere, because it does not know their original cost basis.
Singapore applies its own crypto-tax rules, and the exact treatment depends on your circumstances — see the Singapore crypto tax guide. CryptaTax compiles the complete, reconciled figures those rules need from your Coinhako history.
Yes. It reconciles your Coinhako history with your other accounts, values everything in dollars, and produces a capital-gains and income report aligned to Singapore, ready to file or hand to your accountant.
Moving your own coins between Coinhako and a wallet you control is not a taxable sale. It only looks like one if a tool fails to match the two legs — which CryptaTax does automatically.
Connect Coinhako to CryptaTax by read-only API key or CSV, let it reconcile your history with your other wallets and exchanges, and it produces a capital-gains and income report ready to file.
All the way to your first transaction on Coinhako. Cost basis depends on when you acquired each coin, so a partial export produces partial — and usually wrong — numbers.