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Gifting Bitcoin in 2025: What the IRS says and how to avoid tax trouble
Key takeaways:
Bitcoin has become a popular gift for birthdays, holidays or simply to share enthusiasm for cryptocurrency. Under US tax law, gifting Bitcoin (BTC) is not an immediate taxable event. The recipient owes no income tax, and the donor typically owes no gift tax if the gift’s value is within the annual exclusion limit.
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) treats digital assets as property, not currency. This means Bitcoin gifts fall under the same framework as stocks or real estate. They follow property rules, require valuation at the time of transfer, and may need to be reported on Form 709 if the annual exclusion limit is exceeded.
In short, you can gift Bitcoin without creating an immediate tax obligation. However, poor documentation or misunderstanding basic rules can still cause problems later.
A cryptocurrency gift must be a true transfer of ownership. You give up control and receive nothing in return. The 2025 annual exclusion allows up to $19,000 per recipient, or $38,000 for spouses using gift splitting, without filing Form 709. Exceeding that threshold does not automatically create a tax liability, but the form must still be filed.
Gifts between US citizen spouses are unlimited. For non-citizen spouses, the 2025 limit is about $190,000. Transfers to non-residents or certain trusts may have additional requirements.
Not every transfer qualifies as a gift under IRS rules: Only those made out of genuine generosity without expectation of repayment or services.
When Form 709 kicks in
Form 709, the United States Gift (and Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax Return, is how the IRS tracks gifts that exceed the annual exclusion limit. Most people never owe gift tax, but some transfers still require filing.
You must file Form 709 if:
You do not need to file if:
Did you know? Form 709 is due by April 15 of the year after the gift. A separate form must be filed for each year, and filing doesn’t necessarily mean tax is owed. The 2025 lifetime exemption of $13.99 million typically covers most reportable gifts.
In practice, if you keep cryptocurrency gifts under the annual limit and document the fair market value on the date of transfer, you will likely avoid filing altogether.
Receiving Bitcoin as a gift is not immediately taxable, but your future capital gains tax depends on the basis and holding period you inherit from the donor.
Carryover basis
You generally inherit the donor’s original cost basis and their holding period. If they bought Bitcoin for $5,000 and gifted it when it was worth $20,000, your basis would be $5,000. When you later sell, you will owe capital gains tax on the difference between your sale price and that basis.
Dual-basis rule
If the gift’s market value is lower than the donor’s basis at the time of transfer, two different bases apply:
Early Bitcoin adopters often have very low cost bases, so recipients of appreciated coins can face significant future tax liabilities. Conversely, gifts of Bitcoin worth less than the donor’s basis limit potential loss deductions. If the donor pays gift tax, part of that payment may increase the recipient’s basis.
Obtain the donor’s purchase date, cost basis, the fair market value on the gift date and whether any gift tax was paid before selling. These details determine whether your next Bitcoin sale results in a taxable gain, a deductible loss or no gain or loss.
Crypto-specific pitfalls to avoid
Most cryptocurrency gifts follow standard property rules, but digital assets introduce additional risks that can trigger audits or disqualify deductions.
1. Turning a gift into a sale
If you sell or swap cryptocurrency before transferring it, the transaction counts as a taxable disposition, not a gift. To qualify as a true gift, you must transfer the asset directly, receive nothing in return and permanently give up control.
2. Poor valuation or missing records
Always document the fair market value (FMV) on the date of transfer, along with your original cost basis, purchase date and transaction IDs. Without proper records, the IRS may challenge the reported value or the recipient’s later gain or loss calculation.
3. Gifts that are really income
If cryptocurrency is given in exchange for services to an employee, contractor or influencer, it counts as compensation, not a gift. This makes it taxable income for the recipient and may subject the sender to payroll or self-employment taxes.
4. Cross-border and non-citizen issues
International gifts or transfers involving foreign wallets may require filing Form 3520 and other disclosures. Gifts to non-US-citizen spouses are capped at about $190,000 in 2025 unlike the unlimited exclusion for US-citizen spouses.
Miss one of these rules, and a generous gesture could quickly become a taxable event.
Simple steps to prevent tax trouble
Gifting or donating cryptocurrency in 2025 can be simple if you follow a few key steps:
Before you gift Bitcoin
Most Bitcoin gifts fall safely within IRS limits, and no immediate tax is due. The risk usually arises later when the recipient sells. Because the donor’s basis carries over, gains or losses depend on that original value, not the market price at the time of gifting.
Handled properly, gifting Bitcoin is a straightforward way to share cryptocurrency wealth without tax complications. Keep detailed records, respect the thresholds and confirm that the transfer qualifies as a true gift. Generosity should not come with a surprise tax bill, and with the right steps, it will not.
This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.