Russia has formally integrated cryptocurrency into its tax system through recent legislative changes signed into law in late 2024. While crypto is not recognised as legal tender, it is legally classified as property. Income and gains derived from cryptocurrency are taxable under existing personal and corporate tax laws. Individuals are required to report crypto holdings and pay tax on profits, while businesses face corporate income tax obligations. The Federal Tax Service (FTS) oversees compliance and reporting.
Under Russian law, cryptocurrency is classified as property (*имущество*), not as money or a means of payment. This classification allows the state to tax crypto transactions while maintaining restrictions on its use for domestic payments.
Russia’s crypto tax regime is based on:
Profits from selling crypto for rubles or foreign currency are taxable. The gain is calculated as the difference between sale price and acquisition cost.
Crypto-to-crypto transactions may be taxable if they result in an economic gain. Valuation is typically based on market value in rubles at the time of the transaction.
Although domestic crypto payments are restricted, any economic benefit derived from using crypto may still be considered taxable income.
Crypto received through:
is taxable as income based on its ruble value at the time of receipt.
Companies engaged in mining, trading, or crypto-related services must report crypto income as part of their taxable business profits.
Crypto income and gains earned by individuals are taxed under personal income tax rates:
Companies are subject to corporate income tax, generally at a rate of 20%, on profits derived from crypto-related activities.
Russia does not apply a separate capital gains tax for individuals. Crypto gains are taxed as part of general income.
Individuals must report crypto ownership and transactions to the Federal Tax Service if certain value thresholds are exceeded.
Crypto income must be included in annual personal income tax returns. Businesses must disclose crypto profits in corporate tax filings.
Taxpayers are expected to maintain:
Crypto losses may be deductible against crypto gains if properly documented. Losses generally cannot offset other types of income.
NFTs are treated as property. Profits from NFT sales may be taxed as income or business profits depending on activity.
Airdropped tokens may be taxable as income if they have determinable market value and are freely usable.
Income from staking, lending, or yield farming may be subject to income tax if identified and reported.
Due to mandatory disclosure rules, accurate transaction tracking and ruble-based valuation are essential.
Crypto tax software can help Russian taxpayers calculate gains, track holdings, and prepare reports aligned with FTS requirements.
Failure to disclose crypto holdings or income may result in fines, back taxes, interest, and potential criminal liability in severe cases. Enforcement powers have expanded alongside new crypto legislation.
Russia has moved decisively toward formal crypto taxation, treating digital assets as taxable property. While crypto remains restricted as a payment method, income and gains are clearly taxable. Proper reporting, documentation, and compliance with Federal Tax Service requirements are essential for individuals and businesses.

In June 2026, JuCoin was flagged for abnormal withdrawal processing, with reports that a significant portion of its reserves consisted of stablecoins issued on its own proprietary chain rather than official versions, raising doubts about reserve transparency. The platform has undergone multiple rebrands, previously suffered losses due to contract vulnerabilities, and has heightened user vigilance regarding exchange security. CoinW, in contrast, has maintained an eight-year track record with zero security incidents. It employs multi-signature technology, MPC-based private key sharding and distributed storage, full-stack risk controls with real-time monitoring, and a publicly verifiable Proof of Reserves (PoR) mechanism to ensure transparent and auditable asset backing. Users are advised to self-check withdrawal conditions on their current platforms, verify PoR, assess operational history, and consider migrating to CoinW, where completing KYC enables secure trading.

On June 1, 2026, Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) disclosed that it sold 32 BTC—the company’s first Bitcoin sale since December 2022—to fund preferred stock dividend payments. Although the amount represented only a tiny fraction of its holdings, the transaction created the first visible crack in the long-standing “never sell” narrative.

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