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2025 Year-End Crypto Tax Strategies to Cut Your Tax Bill

New to crypto tax terms? Explore our quick-reference Crypto Tax Glossary for Business Owners to understand key concepts before diving in.

2025 has been a big year for cryptocurrency. If you’ve held Bitcoin or other digital assets through new highs, your portfolio might look great on paper—but that also means a bigger potential tax bill.

The good news: you still have time to use 2025 year-end crypto tax strategies to trim your current-year taxes and set yourself up for smarter gains in future years.

Below are six key 2025 year-end crypto tax strategies to review before December 31 if you hold Bitcoin, Ethereum, or any other taxable crypto.

1. Step up your basis with tax-gain harvesting

If you expect to be in a higher tax bracket next year and you believe your crypto will keep climbing, it can make sense to intentionally realize some gains now and reset your basis at today’s higher price.

Here’s the basic idea:

  1. You sell your appreciated crypto this year and recognize the gain.
  2. You immediately buy back the same position.
  3. Your tax basis in that crypto is now the repurchase price, not your old (lower) cost.

Example: Alex bought 1 Bitcoin for $20,000 three years ago. This year, Alex sells it for $110,000 and realizes a $90,000 long-term capital gain. If Alex is in the 15% long-term capital gains bracket, that’s a $13,500 federal tax bill on the gain. Alex immediately repurchases 1 Bitcoin at $110,000, so the new basis is $110,000.

If Bitcoin later rises to $140,000 and Alex sells then, the future taxable gain is only $30,000 ($140,000 - $110,000) instead of $120,000 ($140,000 - $20,000). Alex has prepaid tax on $90,000 of gain while in a lower bracket and reduced the future tax hit.

Keep in mind:

  • You only get long-term capital gains rates if you’ve held the crypto for more than one year. Short-term gains are taxed at ordinary income rates.
  • If your gains are currently short-term but will become long-term in early 2026, it may be smarter to wait until you qualify for the long-term rate before selling.

2. Harvest losses in underperforming coins

Even in a strong year for Bitcoin, many investors are still sitting on losses in other coins or tokens. Year-end is the time to be intentional: realize those losses and use them to offset your gains.

When you sell crypto at a loss, you create a capital loss. The IRS separates those into:

  • Short-term capital losses (crypto held one year or less).
  • Long-term capital losses (crypto held more than one year).

By law, losses are applied in this order:

  1. Short-term losses offset short-term gains.
  2. Long-term losses offset long-term gains.
  3. If losses in one category exceed gains, the extra can offset gains in the other category. After that, up to $3,000 of remaining net capital losses can offset ordinary income in 2025.

Any unused capital losses carry forward to future years until they’re fully used.

If part of your crypto story includes fraud or theft inside a retirement account, make sure you understand how the IRS treats those situations. For a real-world case study, see our article on crypto scam tax consequences.

3. Use the wash-sale gap (for now)

Traditional stock and mutual fund investors have to watch out for the wash-sale rule: if they sell a security at a loss and buy the same or a “substantially identical” security within 30 days before or after the sale, the loss is disallowed.

As of late 2025, that rule does not apply to cryptocurrency, because the IRS classifies digital assets as property, not as securities. That means you can:

  • Sell a coin or token at a loss,
  • Recognize the loss for tax purposes, and
  • Immediately buy back the same asset (or another crypto) without waiting 30 days.

Example: Morgan bought 100 Solana (SOL) for $23,100 in January 2024. On October 24, 2025, Morgan sells all 100 SOL for $18,600 and realizes a $4,500 short-term capital loss. Morgan can immediately reinvest the $18,600 into Solana or any other crypto and still claim the $4,500 loss for 2025.

Lawmakers have discussed extending wash-sale rules to digital assets, but that hasn’t happened yet. Keep an eye on future tax law changes so this strategy doesn’t surprise you in a later year.

4. Donate appreciated crypto to charity

If you’re already giving to charity and you itemize deductions, donating appreciated crypto instead of cash can be a powerful move. Done correctly, a single donation can create two tax wins:

  • You avoid paying capital gains tax on the crypto you donate.
  • You may get an itemized charitable deduction equal to the fair market value of the crypto at the time you donate it (if you’ve held it more than one year).

To qualify, you must donate to a legitimate Section 501(c)(3) charitable organization or through a donor-advised fund (DAF). Many large charities and DAF sponsors now accept crypto directly.

The basic rules for donating crypto as property are:

  • Held more than one year: You can generally deduct the full fair market value of the crypto at the time of the gift, subject to a 30% of AGI limit for appreciated property.
  • Held one year or less: Your deduction is limited to the lower of your cost basis or the crypto’s fair market value on the date of the gift.

Example: Maria bought 1 Bitcoin for $20,000 three years ago. In 2025, when that Bitcoin is worth $110,000, she donates it to a qualified charity. If Maria’s AGI is high enough to absorb the full deduction this year, she can deduct $110,000 and pay zero capital gains tax on the $90,000 of embedded gain.

If the donation pushes your total itemized deductions over the standard deduction ($15,750 for most single filers and $31,500 for married couples filing jointly for 2025), you’re now getting a bigger deduction than the standard deduction alone.

Practical details to remember:

  • Get a written acknowledgment from the charity that includes the organization’s name, date of the gift, a description of the asset (for example, “Bitcoin”), and whether you received anything in return.
  • If your total crypto donation to a single charity is more than $5,000, you generally need a qualified appraisal and must attach Form 8283 to your tax return.

For IRS details on how digital assets are treated for tax purposes, see the official IRS guidance on digital assets.

5. Gift crypto to family members and other loved ones

Sometimes the goal isn’t to sell your crypto—it’s to move it to the next generation. In 2025, you can give up to $19,000 per recipient (or $38,000 per recipient if you and your spouse both give) without using any of your lifetime estate and gift tax exemption.

A few important points:

  • The annual gift tax exclusion is “use it or lose it.” If you don’t give in 2025, you can’t double the exclusion in a future year.
  • Gifts above the annual exclusion generally require a gift tax return (Form 709), but most people still pay no gift tax because of the multi-million-dollar lifetime exemption.
  • Gifts to your U.S. citizen spouse are generally unlimited and don’t use your exclusion.

Example: Daniel purchased 0.10 Bitcoin for $1,500, and it’s now worth $10,000. He gifts the 0.10 Bitcoin to his grandson. Daniel doesn’t recognize any gain, and his grandson doesn’t report any income when he receives the gift. Because the gift is under $19,000, there’s no Form 709 filing requirement.

The tax basis carries over to the recipient. In this example, the grandson’s basis is $1,500. When he eventually sells the Bitcoin, his gain or loss is calculated from that $1,500 starting point.

It’s smart to give the recipient a simple letter documenting:

  • Who gave the gift and who received it.
  • The type and amount of crypto transferred.
  • The original purchase date and cost basis.
  • The date of the gift and the fair market value at that time.

That letter becomes part of the recipient’s permanent tax records.

6. Use self-directed retirement accounts to grow crypto tax-efficiently

If you want to keep building your crypto position, consider holding some of it inside tax-advantaged retirement accounts instead of only in taxable accounts.

Self-directed IRAs (SDIRAs)

A self-directed IRA lets you invest in assets beyond mutual funds and ETFs—including crypto, if the custodian allows it. The basic rules for 2025 are:

  • Total contributions to your traditional and Roth IRAs combined are limited to $7,000 ($8,000 if you’re age 50 or older), assuming you have at least that much in earned income.
  • Traditional IRA contributions may be deductible depending on your income and retirement coverage at work. Roth contributions are not deductible, but qualified withdrawals are tax-free.

You can’t transfer existing personally held crypto directly into an IRA. Instead, you’d typically sell the crypto, contribute cash to the IRA (up to the annual limit), and then have the IRA buy crypto through the custodian.

Inside the IRA, buying and selling crypto doesn’t trigger current-year capital gains. Taxes are deferred (in a traditional IRA) or potentially eliminated at withdrawal (in a Roth IRA, if you meet the requirements).

Self-directed solo 401(k)s

If you’re self-employed with no employees other than your spouse, a solo 401(k) can dramatically increase how much you can shelter and grow in crypto each year.

For 2025:

  • As the employee, you can defer up to $23,500 of compensation into the plan. If you’re age 50–59 or 64+, you can contribute up to $31,000 with standard catch-up contributions. If you’re 60‑63 and your plan allows it, a “super” catch-up can increase your employee deferral limit to $34,750.
  • As the employer, your business can contribute up to 25% of eligible compensation, subject to overall annual defined contribution limits.

Between employee and employer contributions, total 401(k) contributions for 2025 can reach up to $70,000 for many solo 401(k) owners, with higher effective caps when you include special catch-up contributions for ages 60‑63.

Many solo 401(k) providers now offer crypto access through self-directed options. Be sure to:

  • Confirm that crypto is permitted under your plan document.
  • Understand the custody, security, and trading rules for digital assets inside the plan.
  • Work with a tax professional so contributions are structured correctly and you avoid prohibited transactions or other compliance traps.

Bringing it all together before December 31

Before year-end, take a holistic look at your crypto and overall portfolio:

  • Identify positions with gains you might want to harvest at today’s lower bracket.
  • List underperforming or speculative positions you may want to harvest for losses.
  • Decide whether charitable donations or family gifting fit your goals for transferring wealth and reducing your tax bill.
  • Review whether SDIRAs or solo 401(k)s make sense for future crypto accumulation.

Because digital assets are still a high-scrutiny area for the IRS, make sure your records are clean: keep detailed logs of what you bought, sold, donated, or gifted, and when.

Next step: Get a tailored crypto tax plan

Every situation is different. Your income level, entity structure, and long-term goals all affect which 2025 year-end crypto tax strategies make sense for you.

If you want help sorting through the options—or you need someone to speak “tax” and “crypto” fluently at the same time—we’re here for that.

Schedule a Free Tax Strategy Session and we’ll walk through your crypto positions, your broader tax picture, and the smartest moves to make before December 31.

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