Articles
Bitcoin

BPI targets August for BTC tax relief, but warns time is running out

User Image

Por Anônimo

Criado March 14, 2026|2 mins de leitura
Main Image

The Bitcoin Policy Institute said the bipartisan support for a de minimis tax exemption for smaller Bitcoin transactions is "encouraging."

The Bitcoin Policy Institute (BPI), an industry advocacy group, is eyeing a target window between March and August 2026 to pass a de minimis tax exemption for Bitcoin through Congress, warning that time to pass meaningful legislation is running out.

BPI said it has engaged with 19 Congressional offices in both the House and Senate over the last three months to pitch US lawmakers on a tax exemption for Bitcoin (BTC) transactions below a certain threshold.

Expanding the de minimis tax exemptions beyond dollar-pegged stablecoins has bipartisan support, but the BPI warned that the “window is narrowing” for Bitcoin tax legislation. The BPI said:

If a package does not come together in the next few months, the opportunity may not return for years,” the BPI continued. 

Under current US tax rules, using BTC to pay for goods and services triggers a taxable event and tax reporting to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), preventing the use of Bitcoin as a medium of exchange.

A de minimis exemption would allow small crypto transactions, typically below a set dollar threshold, to be excluded from capital gains reporting, allowing users to spend Bitcoin without calculating gains or losses on minor purchases.

Related: Bitcoin advocate group to fight Basel’s ‘toxic’ treatment of cryptocurrency

Wyoming Senator Cynthia Lummis introduced a bill in July 2025 proposing a de minimis tax exemption for cryptocurrency transactions of $300 or less, capped at $5,000 annually.

However, the bill failed to gain traction in the Senate, and a competing bill focused entirely on tax exemptions for stablecoins was introduced to the House of Representatives by Congresspersons Max Miller and Steven Horsford in 2025.

Bitcoin payments are held back by the digital asset’s current treatment under the US tax code, according to Pierre Rochard, a board member for BTC treasury company Strive. 

“The number one impediment to Bitcoin payments adoption is tax policy, not scaling technology,” Rochard said on X.

Magazine: Big questions: Should you sell your Bitcoin for nickels for a 43% profit?

Source: CoinTelegraph


Outros artigos publicados recentemente

Ric Edelman says crypto’s biggest growth story is happening off the price chart
Ric Edelman says crypto’s biggest growth story is happening off the price chart

Crypto Market Analysis

Crypto prices remain under pressure, but Ric Edelman says institutional adoption and tokenization ar...

Securitize and tZERO clash over patents as race to bring Wall Street onchain heats up
Securitize and tZERO clash over patents as race to bring Wall Street onchain heats up

Crypto Market Analysis

tZERO and Securitize are squaring off over tokenization patents as the market attracts more of Wall ...

U.S. Senate passes housing bill that carries four-year ban on a Fed CBDC
U.S. Senate passes housing bill that carries four-year ban on a Fed CBDC

Crypto Market Analysis

The idea of a U.S. central bank digital currency — though little more than a research topic at the...

MoneyGram joins Solana as validator, expanding role in blockchain infrastructure
MoneyGram joins Solana as validator, expanding role in blockchain infrastructure

Solana

The remittance giant is staking SOL and processing transaction blocks as stablecoin adoption acceler...

Solana grabs 95% of tokenized equity as traders debate if SOL bottom is in
Solana grabs 95% of tokenized equity as traders debate if SOL bottom is in

Solana

Solana captured 95% of tokenized equity volumes as analysts debate whether $60 was the bottom for SO...

New York, Maryland and Utah to hold primaries with crypto PAC money hanging over voters
New York, Maryland and Utah to hold primaries with crypto PAC money hanging over voters

Crypto Market Analysis

Crypto-backed PACs disclosed spending more than $8 million on media to support candidates in three U...