The federal government in Germany is now requiring crypto service providers to submit tax-related user information to the state.
The data will be shared with other nations, both within the EU and beyond, to allegedly make taxable coin transactions more transparent.

The executive power in Berlin has approved a new requirement for cryptocurrency firms to collect and file user info with the German tax authority.
The data will be submitted annually to the Federal Central Tax Office (BZSt) and automatically exchanged with similar bodies in other countries.
The new tax reporting obligation was announced by the Ministry of Finance, the leading German crypto news outlet BTC Echo unveiled Thursday.
In a post on X the previous day, the department indicated the goal was to increase the transparency of tax-relevant transactions involving digital assets.
The immediate effect for crypto users in Germany will be that the state will no longer rely solely on tax returns to learn about their activities, but also on reports from regulated market participants.
The federal government’s decision is part of a comprehensive package of measures meant to improve and expand the exchange of tax information to cover digital currencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum.
It will apply not only to transactions through crypto exchanges and service providers but also to other fintech platforms and financial accounts as well.
All of them will be required to report clients’ revenues to the German tax authority, which will then share the data with counterpart agencies in other EU member states. In turn, it will receive intelligence on German income generated abroad.
The finance ministry also noted that a new supplementary agreement will enable this kind of exchange with relevant authorities in countries outside the European Union.
The update in the tax reporting rules will further increase the regulatory pressure on the blockchain industry in the Bundesrepublik, BTC Echo remarked in its article.
Following the implementation of European regulations such as the Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) law and the DAC8 directive, which entered into force this year, officials are now shifting focus toward tracing digital currency flows.
Licensed crypto service providers will now have to properly prepare for the additional reporting procedures, while clients can expect their transactions to become much more visible to tax authorities.
On a positive note, a tax benefit for cryptocurrency owners recently survived an attempt to remove it in the German parliament, as reported by Cryptopolitan earlier in May.
A bill put forward by the Green party, which is targeting a tax exemption for long-term digital-asset investments, was rejected by other factions in the Bundestag.
Capital gains from the selling of cryptocurrencies more than a year after purchase are tax-free in Germany, and the proposal sought to abolish the “holding period” rule.
The future of this particular tax relief remains uncertain, however, as political support for its removal is growing in Berlin.
The Social Democratic Party, which favors stiffer crypto taxation, is expecting its finance minister Lars Klingbeil to unveil his proposals on the matter.
German authorities have been trying to support the country’s weakened economy through increased government spending.
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