Digital Currency: Frequently Asked Questions
Digital currency encompasses a broad and rapidly evolving landscape of regulatory obligations, technical structures, and professional disciplines that affect individuals, businesses, and institutions alike. These questions address the most pressing practical matters — from how oversight agencies intervene to how classification of different asset types shapes legal treatment. The answers draw on named public frameworks including IRS guidance, FinCEN rules, and SEC enforcement posture, grounding each response in the actual regulatory and operational environment of the US market.
What triggers a formal review or action?
Formal regulatory review of digital currency activity is triggered by four primary mechanisms: suspicious transaction reports filed under the Bank Secrecy Act (31 U.S.C. § 5318), IRS examination of unreported or misreported virtual asset gains, SEC investigation of potential unregistered securities offerings, and CFTC enforcement when commodity derivatives markets are implicated.
The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) requires money services businesses — including certain digital currency exchanges and administrators — to file Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) when a transaction involves at least $5,000 and the firm has reason to suspect illicit activity. The IRS added a mandatory virtual currency disclosure question to Form 1040 beginning in tax year 2019, which means failure to accurately answer that question creates independent audit exposure. The SEC's Division of Enforcement has brought actions against token issuers under the Howey test framework, focusing on whether an asset qualifies as an investment contract. Understanding US federal digital currency regulations is foundational to anticipating these triggers.
How do qualified professionals approach this?
Professionals working in the digital currency space — including tax attorneys, CPAs with virtual asset specializations, and compliance officers at registered money services businesses — structure their work around three distinct frameworks: tax treatment, regulatory classification, and custody risk.
Tax professionals apply IRS Notice 2014-21 and the subsequent Revenue Ruling 2019-24, which established that virtual currency is property for federal tax purposes and addressed the tax treatment of hard forks and airdrops. Compliance professionals at exchanges and payment processors build their programs around FinCEN's 2019 guidance on convertible virtual currencies, which extended the existing money transmission framework explicitly to digital asset businesses. Advisors working with institutional clients incorporate FASB's updated guidance on fair value measurement for crypto assets, codified under ASC 350-60, which took effect for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2024.
What should someone know before engaging?
Before engaging with digital currency — whether through purchase, acceptance as payment, staking, or lending — three foundational points govern the risk profile.
First, digital currency holdings are not insured by the FDIC or NCUA. The FDIC issued a Financial Institution Letter (FIL-16-2022) explicitly clarifying that deposit insurance does not cover crypto assets. Second, every taxable event — sale, exchange, or use to purchase goods — generates a capital gain or loss that must be reported on Schedule D and Form 8949. Third, jurisdiction matters: state-level digital currency laws vary significantly, with New York's BitLicense regime and Wyoming's special purpose depository institution framework representing opposite ends of the regulatory spectrum. Detailed coverage of digital currency consumer protections and digital currency risk assessment helps calibrate expectations before committing capital.
What does this actually cover?
The term "digital currency" covers a wider category than cryptocurrency alone. The full scope includes:
- Cryptocurrency — decentralized, blockchain-based assets like Bitcoin and Ether, governed primarily by the IRS as property and by the CFTC as commodities in derivatives markets.
- Stablecoins — fiat-pegged tokens such as USDC and Tether, which face evolving regulatory treatment from the President's Working Group on Financial Markets (2021 report) and pending Congressional frameworks.
- Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) — sovereign-issued digital fiat, explored by the Federal Reserve through Project Hamilton in collaboration with MIT; no US retail CBDC has been issued as of the latest published Federal Reserve research papers.
- Tokenized assets — blockchain representations of real-world assets (real estate, equities, commodities), subject to securities law when they meet the Howey test.
- In-game and platform currencies — generally not regulated as financial instruments unless they can be converted to fiat.
The Digital Currency Authority homepage provides orientation across all these categories, and types of digital currency offers deeper classification detail.
What are the most common issues encountered?
The 5 most frequently encountered practical issues in the digital currency space are:
- Tax reporting gaps — Failure to track cost basis across exchanges leads to inaccurate gain/loss calculations; the IRS treats each exchange wallet as a separate accounting unit.
- Exchange insolvency exposure — The 2022 failures of FTX, Celsius Network, and Voyager Digital left customers as unsecured creditors in bankruptcy proceedings, with no deposit insurance backstop.
- Private key loss — Chainalysis estimated in 2020 that approximately 20% of all existing Bitcoin — roughly 3.7 million BTC — may be permanently inaccessible due to lost keys.
- Scam and fraud losses — The FTC reported consumers lost more than $1 billion to cryptocurrency fraud in 2021 (FTC Consumer Protection Data Spotlight, June 2022).
- AML compliance failures — Businesses that accept digital currency and fail to implement a written anti-money laundering program under 31 C.F.R. § 1022.210 face civil and criminal penalties from FinCEN.
Resources on digital currency scams and fraud and hacks and exchange failures address these in detail.
How does classification work in practice?
Classification of a digital asset determines which regulatory body has jurisdiction, what tax treatment applies, and what disclosure obligations exist. The core classification question is whether an asset is a commodity, a security, or property (a tax category).
The CFTC has asserted jurisdiction over Bitcoin and Ether as commodities under the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.). The SEC applies the Howey test — from SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293 (1946) — to determine whether a token constitutes an investment contract. An asset meets Howey if it involves (a) an investment of money, (b) in a common enterprise, (c) with an expectation of profits, (d) derived from the efforts of others. When an asset passes all four prongs, it falls under SEC registration requirements.
The IRS classification as property is independent and applies regardless of the CFTC/SEC determination. A token can simultaneously be a commodity under CFTC jurisdiction and property for IRS purposes. Blockchain and digital currency provides technical context that informs how these classifications are applied to specific asset structures.
What is typically involved in the process?
The process of engaging with digital currency in a compliant manner involves discrete phases:
- Account and identity verification — Regulated exchanges must collect Know Your Customer (KYC) information under FinCEN rules at 31 C.F.R. § 1010.230 (the Customer Due Diligence Rule), requiring name, address, date of birth, and government ID.
- Wallet setup and custody decision — Assets can be held in exchange custody (custodial) or in a self-managed wallet (non-custodial). The custody choice affects both security profile and estate planning implications; see storing digital currency — wallets.
- Transaction execution — Buying digital currency in the US involves selecting a registered money services business or broker-dealer, with pricing determined by order book mechanics or market maker spread.
- Record keeping — Every acquisition must be recorded with date, cost basis (in USD), and source. IRS Form 8949 requires asset-by-asset reporting.
- Annual tax reconciliation — Gains and losses are calculated using FIFO, LIFO, or specific identification methods; IRS digital currency reporting addresses the mechanics of each.
- Ongoing compliance monitoring — For businesses, this includes transaction monitoring, SAR filing, and OFAC screening against the Specially Designated Nationals list.
What are the most common misconceptions?
Misconception 1: Cryptocurrency transactions are anonymous. Bitcoin and Ether transactions are pseudonymous, not anonymous. All transactions are permanently recorded on a public ledger. Blockchain analytics firms — including Chainalysis and Elliptic, both of which hold contracts with US federal agencies — routinely trace transaction flows to identify real-world actors.
Misconception 2: Holding cryptocurrency is not taxable. Holding is not a taxable event, but staking rewards, mining income, and hard fork proceeds are treated as ordinary income by the IRS at the fair market value on the date of receipt (Revenue Ruling 2019-24).
Misconception 3: Decentralized exchanges (DEXs) fall outside regulatory reach. The SEC and CFTC have both indicated that decentralization does not automatically exempt a platform from regulatory obligations. The CFTC charged the operator of the bZeroX protocol in September 2022, establishing that DAO governance structures do not preclude enforcement.
Misconception 4: A stablecoin pegged 1:1 to the dollar carries no risk. The May 2022 collapse of TerraUSD — which lost its peg and fell to near zero within 72 hours, erasing approximately $40 billion in market value — demonstrated that algorithmic stability mechanisms can fail catastrophically. Even fiat-backed stablecoins carry counterparty and reserve risk. Stablecoins explained and digital currency market volatility provide detailed treatment of these structural risks.