Every time an American buys a coffee with Bitcoin, they technically owe the IRS a report. That is not a hypothetical edge case. It is the current state of U.S. Every time an American buys a coffee with Bitcoin, they technically owe the IRS a report. That is not a hypothetical edge case. It is the current state of U.S.

Bitcoin Policy Institute Urges Congress to End Capital Gains Tax on Everyday BTC Payments

2026/03/14 09:39
5 min read
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Every time an American buys a coffee with Bitcoin, they technically owe the IRS a report. That is not a hypothetical edge case. It is the current state of U.S. tax law, and the Bitcoin Policy Institute has issued a formal policy brief in March 2026 demanding Congress fix it before the opportunity disappears into midterm political dynamics.

Under IRS Notice 2014-21, Bitcoin is classified as property. That classification means every transaction, regardless of size, triggers a capital gains calculation and a reporting obligation. A $4 latte purchased with Bitcoin that appreciated by six cents requires the same tax treatment as a six-figure asset sale. The BPI describes this as an absurd result that has stifled Bitcoin’s use as a medium of exchange in the United States for years, and the institute’s March 2026 brief frames the 119th Congress as the best opportunity in a decade to correct it.

What BPI Is Asking For

According to Bitcoin Magazine the institute is advocating for a de minimis exemption modeled on the treatment already applied to foreign currency transactions, where personal-use gains under $200 are excluded from tax. The BPI’s preferred framework would extend this logic to Bitcoin and other network tokens through a value-based transaction threshold rather than a gain-based one, with a proposed exemption of up to $600 per transaction and an annual cap of approximately $20,000. The value-based approach sidesteps the cost basis calculation problem entirely for qualifying transactions, removing the reporting burden that makes small Bitcoin payments impractical for everyday use.

The BPI has also endorsed the Bitcoin for America Act, which would allow Americans to pay federal taxes directly in Bitcoin without incurring capital gains liability on the transfer. Senator Cynthia Lummis has a standalone bill proposing a $300 per-transaction threshold with a $5,000 annual cap that also addresses miner and staker double taxation and wash sale rules. The Joint Committee on Taxation scored the Lummis bill as revenue-positive, generating roughly $600 million over ten years, removing the fiscal argument against exemption.

The Stablecoin-Only Problem

BPI’s most pointed current concern is not opposition from critics of crypto taxation reform. It is a drift within the legislative process itself toward a narrower exemption that would cover only stablecoins while explicitly excluding Bitcoin. A bipartisan discussion draft from Representatives Max Miller and Steven Horsford proposed a de minimis provision limited to payment stablecoins, departing from every prior proposal that included Bitcoin and other digital assets.

BPI responded by leading a coalition letter to committee chairs expressing concern that limiting the exemption to stablecoins would offer relief where it is least needed while ignoring the users for whom the current rules are most punitive. The institute argued that stablecoin holders, by definition holding a price-stable asset, face minimal capital gains exposure on transactions regardless of exemption status. Bitcoin users, whose holdings fluctuate in price, are the ones generating the reportable events that make everyday payments impractical. A stablecoin-only exemption would solve a problem that barely exists while leaving the actual problem intact.

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New IRS Requirements Are Making This Worse in Real Time

While the legislative debate continues, the compliance burden on Bitcoin users has intensified rather than eased in 2026. The IRS introduced Form 1099-DA this tax season, requiring centralized exchanges to report digital asset sales and disposals directly to the agency, standardizing a reporting regime that previously relied heavily on self-reporting. Simultaneously, the IRS now mandates per-wallet cost basis tracking rather than the previous universal pooling method, which allowed users to average their cost basis across all holdings of an asset regardless of where it was held. The per-wallet requirement significantly complicates records for anyone who moves Bitcoin between exchanges and personal wallets, a common behavior that now generates distinct cost basis events at each transfer.

The combination of new reporting requirements arriving at the same time as the de minimis reform effort creates an awkward dynamic. Users are being held to stricter compliance standards for a tax treatment that the BPI and a growing number of lawmakers argue should not apply to small transactions in the first place.

The Closing Window

BPI has been explicit about the timeline pressure. Over the past three months the institute has met with 19 congressional offices across both chambers and both parties, making the case that the stablecoin-only approach is insufficient and that bipartisan understanding of the issue is growing. The House Ways and Means Committee held a hearing on digital asset tax policy in July 2025 and is expected to release legislative text soon. The Senate Finance Committee held its own hearing in October 2025. Senator Lummis continues pushing for committee movement, and Senator Daines has pointed to an August 2026 target for legislation.

The urgency is real. Senator Lummis, the issue’s most consistent and forceful congressional champion, departs the Senate in January 2027. If a comprehensive package does not advance before the August 2026 recess, the combination of a departing sponsor and accelerating midterm political dynamics could push meaningful Bitcoin tax reform off the agenda for years.

The post Bitcoin Policy Institute Urges Congress to End Capital Gains Tax on Everyday BTC Payments appeared first on ETHNews.

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