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ForumsCrypto & PrivacyCrypto tax implications for supplement/peptide purchases — what worked for you?

Crypto tax implications for supplement/peptide purchases — what worked for you?

marcus_mpls Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 2:39 PM 9 replies 1,765 viewsPage 1 of 2
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marcus_mpls
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Nov 2024
Minneapolis, MN
Jun 29, 2024 at 4:04 PM#1
Hey CompoundTalk. CPA here (yes we exist on forums). I keep seeing people use crypto for supplement and peptide purchases without thinking about the tax implications, so I wanted to do a quick PSA. 🚨 In the US, every time you spend crypto, it's a taxable event. 🚨 Yes, even buying supplements. Even buying peptides. When you use BTC/ETH/XMR/whatever to make a purchase, the IRS treats it as if you SOLD the crypto first and then used dollars to buy the item. So if you bought 1 BTC at $30k and spent it when it was worth $90k, you owe capital gains tax on that $60k gain. Even though you "just bought some supplements." I see people making this mistake constantly and I don't want anyone in this community getting an unexpected tax bill. Let me break this down more 👇
47 11bbq_ray_KC, oliver_london, tane_welly and 44 others
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lisa_labSD
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Oct 2024
San Diego, CA
Jun 29, 2024 at 4:21 PM#2
Wait WHAT. Every purchase is a taxable event?? Even if I'm just spending like $200 on peptides?? I've been using BTC for pharmacy purchases for like 8 months and I haven't tracked a single transaction. Am I going to jail 😰
Last edited: Jun 29, 2024 at 7:21 PM
38 1maya_sedona, stefan_berlin, Dr.EM_Chicago and 35 others
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FitDadDave
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Jul 2024
Minneapolis, MN
Jun 29, 2024 at 4:38 PM#3
lol you're not going to jail. But you should probably start keeping records going forward, and try to reconstruct past transactions. For small amounts ($200 purchases), the gains are probably minimal unless BTC price moved significantly between when you bought it and when you spent it. Practical example: - You bought $200 of BTC when BTC was at $85,000 - You spent it a week later when BTC was at $87,000 - Your gain is roughly $4.70 - At 15% capital gains rate that's like $0.71 in tax So yeah, small amounts = small gains = small tax. Don't panic. But DO keep records because if the IRS asks, you want to have them 📋
47 20sarah_TO, wendy_avl, jason_paloalto and 44 others
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TomTeleRx
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678
Feb 2025
Delaware
Jun 29, 2024 at 4:55 PM#4
Serious question: how does this work with Monero? The whole point is that transactions are private and untraceable. Is the IRS really going to know I bought $200 of supplements with XMR? Not advocating for tax evasion, genuinely curious about the practical enforcement angle 🤔
41 19HPLC_Greg, LibrarianMeg, bri_stats and 38 others
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FDA_TrackerJim
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Feb 2024
Rockville, MD
Jun 29, 2024 at 5:12 PM#5
I'm going to answer this very carefully because I'm a CPA and I have to give the correct answer: Legally, you are required to report ALL crypto transactions regardless of the coin's privacy features. The IRS doesn't care if it's BTC, ETH, or XMR. Taxable event is a taxable event. Practically — you're right that Monero transactions are much harder (arguably impossible currently) for the IRS to trace. But: 1. The on-ramp is usually traceable (buying XMR on an exchange) 2. The IRS is getting better at blockchain analytics every year 3. Tax evasion penalties are way worse than just paying the (probably small) tax My professional advice: report it. For a $200 supplement purchase, the actual tax owed is probably under $5. Not worth the risk. Keep a simple spreadsheet: date, amount, cost basis, value at time of spend. Takes 30 seconds per transaction. This is not legal advice, just one CPA's perspective 📊
33 23jason_paloalto, Dr.LeslieOBGYN, MikeNYC_runner and 30 others
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