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You are here: Home / Cryptocurrency News / Crypto Tax Rules Tighten as OECD CARF Goes Live in 2026

Crypto Tax Rules Tighten as OECD CARF Goes Live in 2026

What to know:

  • Global crypto reporting rules will start affecting users from January 2026.
  • Exchanges must overhaul onboarding, compliance, and reporting systems.
  • Users face higher audit risk as tax data sharing becomes automatic.

By Mishal Ali | Edited By Messam Raza,December 31, 2025, 8:30 PM

Crypto

As January 1, 2026, approaches, crypto markets are preparing for one of the most significant regulatory shifts to date. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development is rolling out its Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework, known as CARF, across 48 jurisdictions.

Countries that fall under these include the United Kingdom, the European Union, and other major financial hubs.

The new measure will force crypto platforms to collect and share user information with tax authorities, putting an end to the notion that crypto transactions are not part of the global tax regime.

In the CARF, exchanges will require tax residency information, account balances, and transaction information from the users.

This information will then be submitted to the tax agencies, which will then pass the information on to other countries using existing international exchange agreements. 

Some countries will begin gathering information from the first day of the year 2026, so users will experience the impact shortly.

Also Read: Arthur Hayes Reveals Why Altcoin Season Never Stopped – Crypto Investors Take Note

CARF Marks a Turning Point for Crypto Asset Regulation

According to Lucy Frew, who directs the Regulatory and Risk Advisory Group at the worldwide law firm Walkers, the change is a huge one. 

The reason is that this change will bring a tremendous turning point in the manner in which digital asset-related businesses will begin to function in the near future.

As she describes, this change will allow more regulated onboarding, regular reviews of accounts, and far less likelihood of users being able to believe that their offshore accounts are hidden from the taxation authority.

For exchanges, CARF is not only an update to implement with speed. Exchanges are required to integrate new obligations to report into their existing systems for Know Your Customer and Anti-Money Laundering compliance.

This includes designing onboarding processes to obtain tax-residency and self-certification information and building systems to generate reports capable of producing machine-readable files on a standardized form. 

Firms are also likely to require new processes and structures to support staff on CARF and non-CARF geographies.

UK-Regulated Exchanges Face New Compliance Demands

The platforms mainly involved in this development are those that are licensed in the UK. CoinJar, a company regulated in the UK, has even announced that users will soon be required to give more data about their tax residencies.

Asher Tan, the CEO and co-founder of this company, has emphasized how difficult it is to comply with regulations while making the platform user-friendly.

Exchanges that balance the two factors well will possibly find themselves in a better position, as traders increasingly turn to those platforms as this financial product integrates into the financial system.

Also Read: Klarna Returns to Crypto with Coinbase Stablecoin Partnership for BNPL Expansion

Filed Under: Cryptocurrency News

About Mishal Ali

Mishal Ali is a Policy and Regulations Reporter at Tron Weekly with over four years of experience covering the global crypto and blockchain space. Her reporting focuses on crypto regulations and policy, alongside Bitcoin, Ethereum, altcoins, DeFi, NFTs, Web3, Layer 2 solutions, and AI-driven crypto use cases. She also tracks Ripple-related developments, enforcement actions, licensing updates, and crypto scams and fraud trends, helping readers understand regulatory and compliance risks.

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