Calculate capital gains tax on NFT sales including collectibles rate. Estimate gain from sale price minus mint cost, gas fees, and purchase price.
Selling an NFT is a taxable event that may be subject to capital gains tax — and potentially the higher collectibles tax rate of 28%. The IRS has proposed that certain NFTs may qualify as collectibles under Section 408(m), depending on the underlying asset. Digital art, for example, may be taxed at the collectibles rate if held long-term.
Your taxable gain on an NFT sale is the sale price minus your total cost basis, which includes the original purchase price (or mint cost), gas fees paid during minting or purchasing, and any platform fees. Both buying an NFT with crypto and selling an NFT for crypto create taxable events because crypto is used as the medium of exchange.
This calculator helps you estimate the capital gains tax on an NFT sale by accounting for all cost components and applying the appropriate tax rate based on your holding period and income.
NFT taxation is complex because it involves multiple layers: the crypto-to-NFT purchase is one taxable event, and the NFT sale is another. Gas fees and platform fees affect your cost basis. The potential 28% collectibles rate is higher than the standard 20% maximum LTCG rate. This calculator clarifies the total tax picture for any NFT sale.
Cost Basis = Purchase Price + Mint Gas Fees + Buying Fees Net Proceeds = Sale Price − Selling Fees − Sale Gas Fees Gain = Net Proceeds − Cost Basis Tax = Gain × Applicable Rate (collectibles: up to 28%, standard LTCG: 0/15/20%)
Result: $2,044 estimated tax on $7,300 gain
Sale price $10,000 minus $500 platform fees = $9,500 net proceeds. Cost basis = $2,000 purchase + $200 gas = $2,200. Gain = $9,500 − $2,200 = $7,300. At the 28% collectibles rate, tax = $7,300 × 28% = $2,044.
Every NFT sale is a taxable disposition. The gain is the difference between your net sale proceeds and your total cost basis. Remember that paying with crypto to buy an NFT also triggers a taxable event on the crypto itself — you may owe tax on two transactions for a single purchase.
The IRS applies a maximum 28% long-term capital gains rate to collectibles, compared to the 20% maximum for standard assets. NFTs representing artwork, music, or creative content are likely classified as collectibles. This higher rate only applies to long-term gains — short-term gains are taxed at ordinary income rates regardless.
Track every NFT transaction with: date, platform, token ID, purchase/sale price in crypto and USD, gas fees, platform fees, and the corresponding crypto disposition. Multi-chain NFT activity makes this especially challenging, so consider using specialized NFT tax tools.
The IRS has issued proposed guidance that certain NFTs may be treated as collectibles. NFTs representing digital art, music, or similar creative works are likely collectibles with a maximum 28% long-term rate. NFTs representing other rights (like virtual land) may be taxed at standard LTCG rates.
Minting itself is not typically taxable. However, the gas fees and mint cost form your new cost basis. If you mint using crypto, the act of spending that crypto is a taxable disposition of the crypto used as payment.
Gas fees paid to acquire or mint an NFT are added to your cost basis, reducing future gains. Gas fees for selling may reduce your net proceeds. Gas paid for failed transactions is generally a non-deductible personal expense unless part of a business.
Airdropped NFTs are taxed as ordinary income at FMV when received. Your cost basis becomes that FMV. When you later sell, the gain or loss is the sale price minus the FMV at airdrop receipt.
Creator royalties deducted from the sale price reduce the seller's net proceeds and thus their taxable gain. For the buyer, the full purchase price including royalties may be part of their cost basis.
With wash sale rules now extended to digital assets, selling an NFT at a loss and repurchasing a substantially identical NFT within 30 days could trigger the wash sale rule. However, unique 1-of-1 NFTs are unlikely to be considered substantially identical to each other.