Ahead of the upcoming regulatory overhaul, UK authorities have introduced a new set of reporting rules to ensure crypto investors are not deliberately evading taxes, including fines for those who fail to comply with the new requirements.
The new rules, known as the Cryptoasset Reporting Framework, require crypto service providers to collect and report investors’ names, addresses, date of birth, tax residence, national insurance number or tax reference, and a summary of their crypto transactions.
Based on the collected information, the HMRC expects to identify those who haven’t been paying taxes on their crypto profits correctly and bring in money to fund vital public services, including frontline nurses, police, and teachers.
The initiative is estimated to raise up to £315 million, or $477 million, in tax revenue by April 2030, which could fund more than 10,000 newly qualified nurses for a year, the HMRC affirmed.
Member of Parliament and Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury James Murray affirmed that authorities are “going further and faster to crack down on tax dodgers as we close the tax gap and deliver on our Plan for Change.”
He considers that, “By ensuring everyone pays their fair share, the new crypto reporting rules will make sure tax dodgers have nowhere to hide, helping raise the revenue needed to fund our nurses, police and other vital public services.
HMRC’s Director General for Customer Strategy and Tax Design, Jonathan Athow, noted that the upcoming rules aren’t a new taxation regime, as investors are already expected to pay the due tax if they make a profit when selling, swapping, or transferring crypto assets.
The Tax authorities’ new requirements follow the UK’s financial watchdog efforts to establish a more comprehensive regulatory framework for digital assets starting next year.
In May, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) released a Discussion Paper on the features of the upcoming crypto regime as part of the financial authority’s crypto roadmap to expand from the current regime to a more comprehensive regulatory framework.
Previously, the HM Treasury also published a draft and an explainer document detailing the intended policy outcomes of proposed provisions to establish a complete regime for digital assets.
The proposed rules are expected to bring exchanges, dealers, and agents into regulatory limits to crack down “on bad actors while supporting legitimate innovation,” and set clear transparency, consumer protection, and operational resilience standards, similar to traditional financial institutions.