The Agencia Estatal de Administración Tributaria (AEAT), the tax agency in Spain, is going to send notices to the cryptocurrency traders despite the country’s ongoing battle with Coronavirus.
Originally reported by Europa Press earlier this week, the tax agency will send notices between April 1 to June 30 to around 66,000 digital currency investors.
This will be the second consecutive year for the Spanish agency to send notices to crypto investors as last year it handed out 14,700 notices – making the estimated figure for 2020 three times.
In Spain, digital currencies are taxed under the capital gains tax laws, the rate of which ranges from 19 percent to 23 percent.
The Spanish tax authority has been actively pointing out crypto traders since 2015 and to properly tax crypto incomes the Spanish authorities are also collecting data from over 60 crypto platforms including several crypto exchanges.
Apart from the digital currency traders, the tax agency is also going to send notices to the individuals with property rentals and having an income source from abroad.
Crypto taxation struggles
Though Spain is taxing crypto profits in double digits, it’s neighbor Portugal last year announced a trading and payments.
Meanwhile, other global tax agencies are also gearing up to send notifications to individuals not reporting any profits incurred from digital currency-related activities.
The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) last month if they fail to report on their digital currency holdings or incomes.
The US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) also sent letters to taxpayers who might have failed to report income and pay the resulting tax from cryptocurrency transactions.
In South Korea, however, the still persists as different agencies have different views on the sector.
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