💼 Getting Paid in Crypto — How Income Tax Really Works in 2025
Getting paid in crypto is more common than ever — freelancers, creators, remote workers, and even small businesses now receive digital assets as compensation.
But the IRS treats crypto payments very differently than capital gains.
In 2025, crypto compensation is always taxable income, and the rules can surprise many taxpayers.
📖 Table of Contents
1️⃣ Crypto Income Basics — How the IRS Defines It
The IRS treats crypto received as payment the same as receiving cash.
The value of the crypto at the moment you receive it is considered ordinary income.
Crypto income includes:
- Freelance payments
- Employee wages paid in crypto
- Staking rewards
- Mining rewards
- Airdrops
- Referral bonuses and platform rewards
Example:
You receive 0.05 BTC when BTC = $38,000.
→ You report $1,900 of income.
2️⃣ Receiving Crypto for Work (Freelancers, Contractors)
Freelancers and self-employed workers must report crypto payments as self-employment income.
This amount is subject to:
- Federal income tax
- Self-employment tax (Social Security + Medicare)
Important:
You owe taxes even if the crypto drops in value after receiving it.
3️⃣ Employee Wages Paid in Crypto
When employees receive wages in crypto, the employer must:
- Report wages on Form W-2
- Apply federal & state withholding
- Pay payroll taxes
Employees do NOT pay self-employment tax.
4️⃣ Staking, Mining & Crypto Rewards as Income
Rewards are taxable as ordinary income at the moment the reward hits your wallet or becomes available to you.
- Staking: income when credited, not when withdrawn
- Mining: income based on market value when earned
- Airdrops: fully taxable at receipt
- Play-to-earn: considered self-employment income
Example:
You earn 12 AVAX in staking rewards when the price is $28.
→ You report $336 of income.
5️⃣ Income Basis → Capital Gain When You Sell
Crypto received as income later becomes a capital asset.
When you eventually sell or swap it, you calculate gain or loss using:
Gain/Loss = Sale Price – Income Basis
Example:
- You received 0.2 ETH as income worth $500
- Later sold it for $780
Capital gain = $280
Tip:
Income → basis → sale later = two separate taxable events.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. Do I owe income tax even if I never sell the crypto?
Yes — receiving crypto is taxable immediately.
Q2. What if the value drops later?
You still owe tax on the original income value.
Q3. Are staking rewards taxed again when sold?
Yes — as capital gains, separate from the initial income.
🔗 Reference Links
Recommended Crypto Tax Resources:
This section contains Amazon affiliate links.
- Medicare 2026 Series — EA Tax Guide Mini-Book
- 2026 Filing Season at a Glance — EA Tax Guide Mini-Book
*Amazon affiliate links included. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
📚 Crypto Taxation Series (2025)
- Part 1 — Crypto Taxation 101
- Part 2 — How Crypto Mining Is Taxed
- Part 3 — Cost Basis & Gains Explained
- Part 4 — Getting Paid in Crypto
- Part 5 — Crypto for Small Business
- Part 6 — Wallets & Recordkeeping
- Part 7 — Forks & Airdrops
- Part 8 — Gifts & Donations
- Part 9 — Crypto Exchanges
- Part 10 — IRS Reporting Rules