Calculate income tax on cryptocurrency staking rewards. Estimate ordinary income based on token quantity, fair market value at receipt, and tax bracket.
Cryptocurrency staking rewards are taxed as ordinary income by the IRS. When you receive staking rewards — whether from Proof-of-Stake validation, delegated staking, or liquid staking protocols — the fair market value (FMV) of the tokens at the time of receipt becomes taxable income. This income is reported on your tax return just like wages or freelance income.
The tax rate on staking income depends on your total taxable income and filing status, as it is taxed at your marginal ordinary income rate (10% to 37%). Additionally, when you later sell or trade those staking rewards, any change in value since receipt creates a separate capital gain or loss event.
This calculator estimates the income tax on your staking rewards by multiplying the number of tokens received by their FMV at receipt, then applying your marginal tax rate. It helps you set aside the right amount for taxes and plan your staking strategy around after-tax returns.
Many stakers don't realize they owe income tax on every reward received, not just when they sell. This calculator quantifies the tax hit so you can accurately compare staking yields against the tax cost. Understanding the tax reduces surprises at filing and helps you decide whether to sell some rewards immediately to cover the tax bill.
Staking Income = Tokens Received × FMV per Token at Receipt Income Tax = Staking Income × Marginal Tax Rate After-Tax Income = Staking Income − Income Tax
Result: $1,100 estimated tax on $5,000 staking income
You received 2.5 tokens at $2,000 FMV each = $5,000 staking income. With $75,000 existing income (single), you're in the 22% bracket. Tax = $5,000 × 22% = $1,100. After-tax staking income is $3,900.
The IRS treats staking rewards as ordinary income equal to the FMV at the time of receipt. This is similar to how mining rewards, interest income, and wages are taxed. The income is reported on Schedule 1 (or Schedule C if you are a validator business).
Stakers face a potential double tax: income tax when rewards are received and capital gains tax when rewards are sold. If the token price rises after receipt, you owe capital gains on the appreciation. If it falls, you can claim a capital loss. The income tax from receipt cannot be recouped.
Consider selling a portion of your staking rewards immediately to cover the income tax liability. This prevents you from owing tax on tokens that may later decline in value. Alternatively, stake in a tax-advantaged account (like a self-directed IRA) to defer or eliminate the income tax.
Staking rewards are taxable when you receive them and have dominion and control over the tokens. For most staking setups, this is when the rewards appear in your wallet and you can transfer or sell them. Locked or unvested rewards may have different timing.
Staking rewards are initially taxed as ordinary income at fair market value upon receipt. When you later sell those rewards, any price change since receipt is a separate capital gain or loss. So you face two tax events: income at receipt and capital gain at sale.
If you operate as a validator running staking infrastructure, the IRS may consider your staking activity a trade or business subject to self-employment tax (15.3%). Passive delegators who simply stake tokens on an exchange are generally not subject to SE tax.
You still owe income tax on the FMV at the time of receipt. If the price drops and you sell at a loss, you can claim a capital loss to offset other gains. But the original income tax obligation remains based on the receipt-date FMV.
Many staking protocols distribute rewards continuously in small amounts. Use crypto tax software that integrates with blockchain data to automatically capture the FMV at each reward event. Manual tracking is impractical for high-frequency rewards.
The Jarrett case argued that staking creates new property (like a baker baking bread) and shouldn't be taxed until sold. The IRS refunded the taxpayer but did not formally change its position. The general guidance remains that staking rewards are income at receipt.