πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ USA Β· πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ UK Swap Tax Guide

Crypto Swap Tax: Do You Pay on Crypto-to-Crypto Trades in the US & UK? (2026)

Understanding crypto swap tax is essential β€” swapping ETH for SOL, BTC for USDC, or any token for another feels like a portfolio reshuffle β€” not a sale. But both the IRS and HMRC disagree. Here’s exactly what happens when you swap, and how to calculate what you owe.

I'm a developer, not a tax professional. This guide is researched from primary sources (linked in each section) but hasn't been reviewed by a CPA. Verify against official guidance before filing.

1. The short answer β€” yes, crypto-to-crypto swaps are taxable

In both the United States and United Kingdom, swapping one cryptocurrency for another is aΒ taxable disposal eventΒ β€” even though no fiat currency changed hands. The moment you exchange Token A for Token B, you are treated as having sold Token A at its current fair market value, realising any gain or loss relative to what you originally paid for it.
This surprises a lot of investors who think “I didn’t cash out, so I don’t owe tax.” That logic applies to stocks in some jurisdictions β€” but not to crypto in the US or UK under current rules.

One sentence to remember

A crypto-to-crypto swap is treated as: sell Token A at today's price β†’ buy Token B at today's price. The "sell" part creates a taxable gain or loss. The "buy" part sets your new cost basis in Token B.

2. Why crypto swaps trigger tax β€” the property rule explained

The reason is straightforward once you understand how both the IRS and HMRC classify cryptocurrency. Neither country treats crypto as currency. Both treat it as property.
Under IRS Notice 2014-21 β€” the foundational guidance still in effect today β€” general tax principles that apply to property transactions apply equally to crypto transactions. When you exchange one piece of property for another piece of property, you have disposed of the first piece at its fair market value. That disposal triggers a gain or loss calculation.
The same logic applies in the UK. HMRC’s Cryptoassets Manual at CRYPTO22100 defines a disposal broadly to include any exchange of one cryptoasset for another, even where no sterling changes hands.

The "like-kind exchange" loophole was closed in 2018

Before 2018, some US investors argued that swapping one crypto for another qualified as a "like-kind exchange" under Section 1031, which would defer the tax. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (2017) closed this permanently β€” Section 1031 now applies only to real property. Crypto-to-crypto swaps have been fully taxable in the US since January 1, 2018.

3. US (IRS): how crypto swap tax is calculated

When you swap one crypto for another, the IRS requires you to calculate a gain or loss on the asset you gave up, using this formula:

The calculation

Gain / Loss = Fair Market Value of Token Received βˆ’ Cost Basis of Token Given Up

The fair market value of the token you received in the swap becomes your new cost basis in Token B, and your holding period for Token B starts fresh from the date of the swap β€” not from when you originally bought Token A.

2026 change: Form 1099-DA now mandatory

Starting with 2025 transactions reported in 2026, all centralised US exchanges must issue Form 1099-DA. reporting your gross proceeds from crypto disposals β€” including crypto-to-crypto swaps. The IRS now receives this data automatically. The era of voluntary swap reporting is over. Report every swap on Form 8949, then summarise on Schedule D.

4. UK (HMRC): swap disposals and Section 104 pooling

HMRC’s treatment mirrors the IRS in one key respect: swapping one cryptoasset for another is a disposal of the first asset at its sterling market value at the moment of the swap. The gain or loss is calculated as:

The calculation

Gain / Loss = GBP Market Value of Token Received βˆ’ Allowable Cost from Section 104 Pool

The “allowable cost” isn’t necessarily what you paid for the specific coins you’re swapping β€” HMRC requires Section 104 pooling, which means all your holdings of a particular token are averaged into a single cost pool. When you swap some of those tokens, the cost is drawn from that pool proportionally.
RuleWhat it means for swaps
Same-Day RuleIf you acquire the same token on the same day as a disposal, the acquisition is matched first
30-Day (Bed & Breakfast) RuleIf you sell a token and rebuy within 30 days, the disposal is matched against the repurchase β€” prevents artificial loss harvesting
Section 104 PoolAll remaining holdings averaged into one pool β€” you cannot cherry-pick specific coins to minimise your gain
CGT rate on gain18% (Basic Rate) or 24% (Higher Rate) β€” on gains above the Β£3,000 Annual Exempt Amount

Key difference from the US

US investors can use Specific Identification to choose exactly which coins they are selling (e.g. sell the coins with the highest cost basis first to minimise gains). UK investors cannot β€” Section 104 pooling is mandatory. This makes cost basis tracking in the UK simpler but gives investors less flexibility to optimise their tax position.

5. Stablecoin swaps β€” the trap most investors don't see coming

One of the most common crypto swap tax mistakes is the treatment of stablecoin swaps. Many investors swap volatile tokens into USDC, USDT, or DAI as a way to “park” their gains without cashing out. They assume this is not taxable because they haven’t converted to fiat.
This is wrong in both countries. A swap from Bitcoin into USDC is a disposal of Bitcoin at its current fair market value. If Bitcoin has appreciated since you bought it, you have realized a capital gain β€” regardless of whether you convert to dollars or to a dollar-pegged stablecoin.

The GENIUS Act (US, 2025) did not change this

The GENIUS Act, signed in July 2025, created the first federal regulatory framework for payment stablecoins β€” but it did not change stablecoin tax treatment. Swapping crypto for a stablecoin is still a taxable disposal under IRS Notice 2014-21. Regulatory legitimacy for stablecoins does not equal tax exemption.

Swapping between stablecoins can also be taxable

If you swap USDC for USDT, this is technically a disposal of USDC at its fair market value. If USDC was worth exactly $1.00 and your cost basis was $1.00, there is no gain β€” but if there is any fractional price difference (which can occur momentarily in stablecoin markets), there is a technical gain or loss. This is small in practice but real in principle, and in 2026 Form 1099-DA may flag these transactions automatically.

6. DeFi swaps and what changes in 2026

Swaps conducted through decentralised exchanges (DEXes) like Uniswap or Curve are treated identically to centralised exchange swaps for tax purposes in both the US and UK. The decentralised nature of the platform does not create a tax exemption.
Transaction typeUS tax treatmentUK tax treatment
Swap on CEX (Binance, Coinbase)Taxable disposalTaxable disposal
Swap on DEX (Uniswap, Curve)Taxable disposalTaxable disposal
Bridging same token cross-chainGenerally not taxable if same assetLikely not taxable β€” same asset transferred
Liquidity pool deposit (e.g. ETH + USDC)Likely taxable disposal of tokens depositedLikely taxable β€” HMRC treats as disposal
Receiving LP tokens in returnNew asset β€” cost basis = FMV at receiptNew asset β€” cost basis = GBP value at receipt

2026: DeFi broker reporting repealed β€” but your obligation remains

In 2025, Congress repealed IRS rules that would have required DeFi platforms to report user transactions as brokers. However, this repeal only removes the third-party reporting obligation β€” it does not remove your personal tax liability. DeFi swap gains are still taxable and must still be reported by you. Most on-chain activity is also publicly visible on the blockchain, which the IRS uses alongside Chainalysis data to identify non-compliant traders.

7. Worked example: swapping BTC for ETH in the US and UK

You bought 0.5 BTC for $15,000 eighteen months ago. Today BTC is trading at $50,000 per coin, so your 0.5 BTC is worth $25,000. You swap it for ETH at a ratio that gives you approximately 6.94 ETH (at $3,600 each).

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ USA β€” held 18 months (long-term), 15% bracket

Proceeds (FMV of ETH received)
$25,000
Cost basis of BTC given up
$15,000
Capital gain on disposal
$10,000
Tax rate (long-term, 15%)
15%
Tax owed on this swap
$1,500

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ New ETH cost basis (important)

ETH acquired
~6.94 ETH
New cost basis per ETH
$3,600 (FMV at swap)
Total ETH cost basis
$25,000

πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ UK β€” Higher Rate taxpayer, no other gains this year

Proceeds (GBP value of ETH received)
Β£19,825*
Allowable cost from BTC pool
Β£11,895*
Gain before allowance
Β£7,930
Annual Exempt Amount
βˆ’Β£3,000
Taxable gain
Β£4,930
CGT rate (Higher Rate, 24%)
24%
Total ETH cost basis
Β£1,183
*GBP figures use illustrative USD/GBP rate of 0.793 for comparison.

The key takeaway from this example

You did not receive a single pound or dollar in this transaction β€” yet you owe real tax in both countries. This is why crypto-to-crypto swap tax is the most common unexpected liability for crypto investors. The swap felt like a portfolio move; the IRS and HMRC saw it as a sale.

8. Frequently asked questions

Does swapping crypto reset my holding period?
Yes β€” in the US, when you swap Token A for Token B, your holding period in Token B starts fresh from the date of the swap. The time you held Token A does not carry over. This matters significantly: if you swap after holding Token A for 10 months, you lose the benefit of the long-term rate on Token B until you’ve held it for another 12 months from the swap date.
Yes. You must report every swap on Form 8949 (US) or your Self Assessment return (UK), regardless of whether you made a gain or a loss. The good news: a loss from a swap can offset other capital gains in the same tax year, reducing your overall tax bill. In the US, net losses exceeding your gains can offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year.
In the US, gas fees paid when acquiring an asset can be added to your cost basis, which reduces your gain when you eventually dispose of it. Gas fees paid at the point of disposal can reduce your proceeds. In the UK, allowable transaction costs can be added to your cost basis or deducted from your disposal proceeds when calculating the gain. Keep records of all gas fees paid β€” they add up and can meaningfully reduce your taxable gain over time.
This is genuinely unsettled in both countries. The IRS has not issued specific guidance on token wrapping. Many tax professionals argue that wrapping is not a disposal because you are not changing economic exposure β€” you are just changing the technical format of the same asset. However, the conservative position (and what most tax software defaults to) treats wrapping as a disposal. Until there is clear guidance, discuss this with a tax professional if you wrap frequently.
If your cost basis equals the fair market value at the time of the swap, your gain is zero and no tax is owed on that swap. However, you still need to report the transaction on your return (US: Form 8949; UK: Self Assessment). A zero-gain disposal is still a reportable disposal.
For every swap: the date and time, the token you gave up (name, quantity, cost basis, holding period), the token you received (name, quantity, fair market value at swap in USD or GBP), any fees paid, and the platform or protocol used. For DeFi swaps, export transaction history from your wallet or use a blockchain explorer to reconstruct the record if needed. Both the IRS and HMRC can request this documentation going back several years.
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