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US Crypto Tax Year 2022: Inflation-Based Changes to Know
To offset the impact of rising inflation, the IRS has revised a number of tax provisions to let people keep more of their money in their wallets for the 2022 tax year. This piece is part of CoinDesk's Tax Week.

With inflation running at a four-decade high in the United States, the country’s federal tax agency – Internal Revenue Service (IRS) – has responded by making adjustments to some sixty provisions.
Several of these changes will directly affect how much tax you owe for your cryptocurrency activities for the year ahead.
This piece is part of CoinDesk’s Tax Week.
Standard deductions
Starting off, the amount U.S citizens can deduct from their taxable income – known as “Standard Deduction” – has been increased, meaning you get to hold on to a little more cash than the previous year.
Cryptocurrency-based activities that are treated as income in the U.S. include:
- Receiving crypto tokens from airdrops.
- Receiving cryptocurrency for completing contracted work.
- Interest earned from crypto assets deposited in decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols.
- Crypto mining, including income both earned from block rewards and transaction fees.
- Any tokens earned from providing liquidity or staking.
Federal income tax brackets
Changes are also being made to income brackets. These will affect how much tax you’ll owe for short-term held crypto assets (assets held for less than one year). Anything held for longer is treated as a long-term capital gain and subject to either 0%, 15% or 20% tax depending on individual or combined marital income.
Individual filers
Joint-filing married couples
Further Reading from CoinDesk's Tax Week
The Automatic Tax Man Cometh
Crypto won’t save you from taxes, but it may eventually make them easier to pay, says futurist Dan Jeffries.
How to Avoid Getting Rekt by Crypto Taxes
Tax guidance lags innovation. So does tax software. Meanwhile, misconceptions abound. If not careful, investors can end up owing more tax than expected and having to unload crypto to pay the bill
Taxes Are a Wild Card for Public Companies Holding Crypto
Investors in MicroStrategy, Tesla, Block and Coinbase need to consider how wild price swings will affect results, not only directly but indirectly due to complex tax accounting rules.

Ollie Leech
Ollie is the Learn editor for the Crypto Explainer+ section. He holds some SOL, RAY, CHSB and BTC.
