
While most people were trying to recall which streaming service had the football, a subtle rule change went into effect sometime between Christmas and the New Year. This change is likely to outlive the headlines it generated. Every cryptocurrency exchange in the UK and a long list of foreign ones started gathering the kind of data about their British users that previously required a court order on January 1, 2026. names. addresses. numbers for national insurance. The entire lot. Eventually, everything flows to HMRC.
It’s difficult to ignore the lack of fuss. The BBC published an article. Updates were pushed by a few accounting blogs. There was a typical mix of bravado and panic in Reddit threads. However, if you ask a casual cryptocurrency holder in any Manchester or Bristol pub what CARF is, you’ll likely get a blank stare. The peculiar aspect of this change is that. It feels almost undetectable and has a huge scope.
| HMRC Cryptocurrency Reporting — Key Facts (2026) | Details |
|---|---|
| Regulating Authority | HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) |
| Framework In Force | Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) |
| Start Date For Data Collection | 1 January 2026 |
| First Reports Due From Exchanges | May 2027 |
| Applicable Taxes | Capital Gains Tax (18% / 24%) and Income Tax on staking, mining, airdrops |
| Annual CGT Allowance | £3,000 |
| Filing Deadline (2024/25 tax year) | 31 January 2026 |
| Required Forms | SA100, SA108, plus a dedicated cryptoassets section |
| Information Shared By Exchanges | Name, address, NI number/UTR, transaction values, asset types |
| Detection Tools Used By HMRC | “Connect” AI system, blockchain analytics, exchange feeds |
| Penalty For Non-Reporting | Starts at £100, escalates with concealment |
| Cost Basis Method | Section 104 pooled cost (not FIFO) |
The UK and dozens of other nations adopted the OECD’s Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework, which imposes no new taxes. It simply eliminates the hiding spots. Casual investors used to assume that HMRC would only truly know what you told them. That presumption is complete. Exchanges now gather KYC data at the time of enrollment, record each disposal, and submit it yearly in a structured format that the tax office can quickly compare to your self-assessment.
Talking to accountants who deal with this stuff gives me the impression that the next eighteen months will be chaotic. Back in 2021 or 2022, many people exchanged tokens without realizing that the exchange constituted a taxable disposal. They assumed nothing happened because they did not sell to GBP. The data trail now shows that HMRC has a different perspective. Failure to report can have serious consequences, especially if concealment rather than an honest error is suspected.
The technological aspect is more advanced than most people realize. Originally designed to identify irregularities in traditional tax returns, HMRC‘s “Connect” system now incorporates blockchain analytics. Future transactions into and out of a wallet can be monitored once it has been linked to a verified identity at any regulated exchange. Pseudonymous ledgers are a long-forgotten myth. A wallet is simply unlabeled until it is labeled, and exchanges have been doing just that. It is not anonymous.
The way gains are calculated under UK regulations complicates matters. Here, there is no first-in, first-out shortcut. Every purchase of the same asset feeds into a running average under HMRC’s Section 104 pooled cost method. A year of moderate trading can become a spreadsheet nightmare when the same-day and 30-day matching rules are added. Individuals who moved coins between wallets, used three or four exchanges, claimed a few airdrops, and experimented with DeFi staking will probably discover that their handwritten calculations differ from what the exchanges report.
Investors with substantial holdings are moving toward expert assistance. Specialized tax software products and companies like Price Bailey have experienced significant growth. Most advisers have a simpler message for smaller holders: don’t assume that a quiet wallet on a Ledger device is invisible, keep records, and declare everything. Most likely, it isn’t anymore.
It’s still unclear if all of this deters tax evaders or primarily annoys regular people who were unaware that exchanging ETH for SOL constituted a sale. The tone of cryptocurrency in the UK has undoubtedly changed. It felt like a frontier once. It feels like everything else now.
