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ForumsCrypto & PrivacyCrypto wallet security for peptide purchases — July 2024

Crypto wallet security for peptide purchases — July 2024

jason_sac26 Thu, Oct 2, 2025 at 8:23 AM 9 replies 1,012 viewsPage 1 of 2
jason_sac26
New Member
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Jan 2026
Sacramento, CA
Oct 2, 2025 at 9:48 AM#1

Now that several of us are using Bitcoin, Monero, and Lightning for peptide purchases, I want to raise something that nobody seems to talk about: tax implications.

In the US, the IRS treats cryptocurrency as property, not currency. This means every time you spend crypto, it's technically a taxable event — you're "disposing" of property, and any gain or loss relative to your cost basis must be reported.

Has anyone actually dealt with this for peptide purchases? Is anyone tracking their cost basis? Or is everyone just... ignoring it? Not judging, genuinely curious about how people handle this.

32 13pete_RVA, CarlaRPh_TPA, steph_laguna and 29 others
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Dr.SleepRoch
Senior Member
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Apr 2024
Rochester, MN
Oct 2, 2025 at 10:05 AM#2

You're correct about the tax treatment, and I appreciate you raising it because it's widely ignored.

The legal reality (US):

  • Per IRS Notice 2014-21 and subsequent guidance, cryptocurrency is treated as property for federal tax purposes
  • Using crypto to purchase goods or services is a disposal event
  • You must calculate the gain or loss: (Fair Market Value at time of spending) minus (your cost basis when you acquired the crypto)
  • Short-term gains (held < 1 year) are taxed as ordinary income; long-term gains (held > 1 year) get preferential capital gains rates

Practical example:

  • You buy 0.01 BTC for $400 on Coinbase
  • Two weeks later, you spend 0.005 BTC ($210 at current price) on peptides
  • Your cost basis for that 0.005 BTC was $200 (half of your $400 purchase)
  • Capital gain: $210 - $200 = $10
  • This $10 gain is reportable short-term capital gain

For small, frequent purchases where you buy and spend crypto quickly, the gains (or losses) are typically minimal. The real tax issue arises if you're spending crypto that you bought a long time ago at much lower prices.

44 2kim_atl_prep, sarah_TO, wendy_avl and 41 others
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PharmacoVig_BOS
Senior Member
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Feb 2024
Boston, MA
Oct 2, 2025 at 10:22 AM#3

I'll be the one to say what most people are thinking: for small supplement purchases, the practical tax impact is near zero and the reporting burden is disproportionate.

If you follow the "buy and spend quickly" approach (buy $250 of BTC, immediately spend $230 on peptides), your capital gain is negligible — maybe a few dollars up or down depending on price movement in that short window. Technically reportable? Yes. Will the IRS audit you over a $3 capital gain on a peptide purchase? Extremely unlikely.

That said, if you're doing this properly:

  • Use crypto tax software like Koinly, CoinTracker, or TaxBit. These can import your exchange transactions and calculate gains/losses automatically.
  • Keep records: Screenshot your purchase receipt, the exchange rate at time of payment, and the transaction hash. If you ever need to substantiate anything, you'll have it.
  • If in doubt, talk to a CPA who understands crypto. Most major accounting firms have crypto-knowledgeable staff now.

The buy-and-spend-quickly strategy minimizes both tax liability and price exposure. It's the simplest approach for using crypto as a payment method rather than as an investment.

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claudia_zurich
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Jul 2024
Zurich, CH
Oct 2, 2025 at 10:39 AM#4

What about using stablecoins (USDT, USDC) instead? Since they're pegged to the dollar, there shouldn't be any capital gain, right?

30 18alex_tucson, kevin_tulsa, Dr.PainCLE and 27 others
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roxy_nash
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Dec 2024
Nashville, TN
Oct 2, 2025 at 10:56 AM#5

Good thought, but technically still a taxable event. Even if USDC is always worth ~$1.00, the IRS still considers the disposal of cryptocurrency property a reportable event. However, since the gain is effectively $0 (you bought at $1, spent at $1), there's nothing to actually tax.

Stablecoins are a pragmatic solution for this exact reason:

  • No price volatility risk between purchase and spending
  • Negligible or zero capital gains
  • Simpler record-keeping
  • Still qualifies for most suppliers' crypto discounts

The downside is that stablecoins don't provide the same privacy benefits as Monero or Lightning. USDC on Ethereum is fully traceable, and Circle (the issuer) cooperates with law enforcement. But if privacy isn't your concern and you just want the discount without the tax headache, stablecoins are the way to go.

Some suppliers also accept USDT on the Tron network, which has very low transaction fees (~$1) compared to Ethereum-based USDC ($5-15 in gas fees).

3 0kim_atl_prep, sarah_TO, wendy_avl
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