Germany is ramping up pressure on crypto investors to properly report their profits this year, with new European rules requiring exchanges to share user info with the state. What’s more, tax offices across the Federal Republic have been improving their expertise in the field and are now employing special tools to track down evaders and their assets. Germany implements latest EU regulations in crypto taxation The times when cryptocurrency holders could keep their operations secret and conceal income from the German government are coming to an end, the local press reported. This year’s tax season brings changes that should make investors more diligent when filling out their tax returns, as authorities become more capable of verifying the declared data. Starting from 2026, crypto platforms are obliged to collect and submit details about clients and their transactions to the tax administration. This is directly resulting from the implementation of the European Union’s DAC8 directive in Germany, which entered into force on January 1. The document mandates the automatic cross-border exchange of information on cryptocurrency flows between EU member states. The eighth amendment enlarged the scope of the EU’s Directive on Administrative Cooperation in Direct Taxation to cover digital assets. It requires crypto-asset service providers (CASPs) active in the Union to report on users and their transactions with the aim of boosting the fight against tax fraud and evasion while reducing tax avoidance and ensuring transparency in the space. All such businesses in Germany, and those based abroad but serving German customers, must now share this kind of data with the country’s federal and regional tax bodies. This includes popular platforms such as Bitpanda, Bison, Binance, Coinbase, and Kraken. Crypto investors targeted by German tax authorities The new regulation is going to significantly expand the transfer of tax-related info between entities such as cryptocurrency exchanges and tax authorities in Germany and across the 27-strong bloc. In an article devoted to the matter published Friday, the business daily Handelsblatt remarked: “The risk of being caught for tax evasion is therefore increasing many times over.” Meanwhile, relevant expertise within tax offices is growing, BTC Echo noted, adding that the authorities are already deploying tools, developed by companies like the blockchain forensics firm Chainalysis, to link transactions and wallets to taxpayers. “This puts more pressure on investors to properly document their transactions,” the leading German crypto news outlet pointed out in its own report. While many of them may have registered losses during the past year, those that have made some gains need to pay attention to potential pitfalls when estimating their tax liabilities, the portal warned. For example, investors who used multiple exchanges, transferring coins between different wallets, can sometimes find it hard to reconstruct their full transaction history and correctly calculate their profits, experts say. Another common mistake is the failure to report crypto-to-crypto swaps or the use of cryptocurrencies for payments that may be taxable events as well. What taxes are due for crypto transactions in Germany? The good news for German crypto investors is that taxation can still be legally avoided under certain circumstances. Digital currencies in Bitcoin are treated in Germany as other assets. They are not subject to withholding tax like classic capital investments , but to the rules for private sale transactions. Annual profits under €1,000 from such deals are tax-free. The same is valid for gains from coins that have been held for more than a year after purchase, which means they are sold outside the one-year “speculation period.” The threshold for income from activities such as staking, lending or mining is just €256 a year. In case of surpassing the free limits in both cases, however, the full amount is taxed, because these are not allowances, as noted by the crypto tax service Waltio. Personal income tax, in accordance with Germany’s progressive tax scale, is due for all taxable crypto profits. Rates vary between 0% and 45%, depending on the size of the income. And if the total tax exceeds €18,130, a levy called “solidarity surcharge” is applied, and it can reach a maximum of 5.5%. It’s worth noting that under current German tax law, losses resulting from cryptocurrency transactions can be offset against profits obtained from other private divestment transactions. Tax returns for 2025 must be filed by the end of July 2026. If you're reading this, you’re already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter .