IRS and Treasury propose allowing brokers to default to electronic delivery of Form 1099-DA; industry groups cite privacy and 2025-26 compliance timelines.IRS and Treasury propose allowing brokers to default to electronic delivery of Form 1099-DA; industry groups cite privacy and 2025-26 compliance timelines.

Crypto weighs IRS bid to allow default e-delivery of 1099-DA

2026/03/06 00:06
3 min read
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Crypto weighs IRS bid to allow default e delivery of 1099 DA

Key Takeaways:

  • IRS proposes default electronic delivery of crypto 1099-DA taxpayer forms.
  • Industry backs e-delivery for efficiency, environmental gains, privacy-aware data minimization.
  • Proposal reduces mailing costs; requires identity verification, secure access, paper fallback.

The Internal Revenue Service has proposed allowing crypto exchanges to deliver taxpayer forms electronically by default, as reported by The Block. The proposal targets Form 1099-DA, the new information return for digital asset transactions, and seeks to shift away from paper-by-default delivery rules.

Current rules for digital asset reporting were finalized earlier and begin with 2025 transactions, with recipient statements furnished in early 2026, as reported by Yahoo Finance. Under those rules, taxpayer copies are paper by default unless the recipient affirmatively consents to electronic delivery.

Industry comment letters from Coinbase and the Crypto Council for Innovation support default electronic delivery, citing operational efficiency and environmental benefits. Stakeholders have also flagged privacy and data-minimization considerations, noting that digital-native platforms already communicate primarily online.

If adopted, a default e-delivery regime would change consent mechanics for brokers and reduce large-scale mailing costs. Any final framework would still need clear standards for identity verification, secure access, and fallback options for recipients who prefer or require paper.

Form 1099-DA is the information return brokers use to report digital asset disposals, including gross proceeds and, in defined cases, adjusted basis, according to PwC analysis. The reporting obligation applies to digital asset brokers such as centralized exchanges, with the first recipient statements expected for 2025 activity in early 2026 under the final framework.

Commentary on the proposal emphasizes the administrative burden of paper-by-default rules for a digital-first sector. After reviewing policy materials, one government report underscored the cost trade-offs: “forcing paper statements unless affirmative consent is given imposes ‘unnecessary and burdensome costs,’” said a White House digital assets report.

Industry groups have urged regulators to limit routine inclusion of highly granular identifiers and to rely on secure broker retention for examinations. Exchanges would also need robust authentication, encryption, and account-recovery processes to mitigate phishing, account lockouts, and delivery failures.

At the time of this writing, Bitcoin trades near $71,400 with medium volatility and a neutral momentum profile. This market backdrop does not change filing obligations but illustrates why timely, accurate 1099-DA delivery remains operationally important for brokers and taxpayers.

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