Crypto Tax in Austria: Complete 2026 Guide
🇦🇹 Taxable AssetHow is Crypto Taxed in Austria?
Austria treats cryptocurrency as a taxable asset. The principal tax authority is FMA, BMF. Tax treatment is: KESt — flat capital tax, with applicable rates of 27.5%.
Austria's broader cryptocurrency framework is Legal & Regulated. Legal under MiCA. 27.5% capital tax — same as listed securities.
Most disposals — selling crypto for fiat, swapping one crypto for another, spending crypto on goods or services, or gifting (in many jurisdictions) — are taxable events under Austria's rules. Receipts of crypto from mining, staking, employment, airdrops, and certain DeFi rewards are typically taxed as income at the moment of receipt. Always confirm with a local tax adviser whose practice covers digital assets.
Austria Crypto Tax Rates & Bands
Applicable rates in Austria: 27.5%. The headline rate sits within the framework described above. Most jurisdictions taper rates by income band or by holding period. For specific bracket figures applicable to your situation, consult FMA, BMF's current published guidance and a qualified local tax adviser.
Which Crypto Transactions are Taxable in Austria?
- ✅ Selling crypto for fiat (Austria currency or any foreign currency)
- ✅ Swapping one cryptocurrency for another
- ✅ Using crypto to buy goods or services
- ✅ Receiving crypto as employment income, mining rewards, or staking rewards
- ✅ Most airdrops at fair market value at receipt
- ❌ Buying crypto with fiat (not taxable; establishes cost basis)
- ❌ Transferring between your own wallets
- ❌ Holding crypto without disposing (no realized gain or loss)
How to Report Crypto to FMA, BMF
- Compile your transaction history across all exchanges and wallets used during the tax year.
- Calculate gain or loss on each disposal in Austria currency using your country's permitted cost-basis method.
- Determine whether each event is capital gain or ordinary income under Austria rules.
- Report on your annual tax return through FMA, BMF's standard channels.
- Keep all supporting records — exchange CSVs, wallet histories, and proof of fair-market values — for the legally required retention period.
Mining, Staking & DeFi in Austria
Mining
Mining rewards are almost universally taxed as ordinary income at fair market value at the time received, with the income amount becoming cost basis for subsequent disposal calculations. Commercial-scale mining may be classified as business income subject to additional licensing and reporting.
Staking
Staking rewards in Austria are generally treated as ordinary income at receipt. Liquid staking tokens may create additional tax-event complexity depending on how the country treats the wrapping/unwrapping events.
DeFi
Decentralised finance receives limited specific guidance in most jurisdictions. Conservative practice treats protocol-interaction events (lending deposits, liquidity-pool entries, swaps) as taxable disposals and treats yield accruals as ordinary income at receipt. Consult a specialist in Austria for active DeFi positions.
Frequently Asked Questions — Austria Crypto Tax
Is crypto taxed in Austria?
Yes. FMA, BMF applies KESt — flat capital tax at rates of 27.5%. The treatment depends on whether activity is classified as investment or business and varies by transaction type.
What's the crypto tax rate in Austria?
The applicable headline rate or rate range is 27.5%. For specific bracket figures, consult FMA, BMF's current published guidance.
Do crypto-to-crypto trades trigger tax in Austria?
In most jurisdictions yes — a crypto-to-crypto swap is the disposal of the asset given up and creates a taxable gain or loss. A few jurisdictions (notably France for occasional investors) exempt such swaps. Always check FMA, BMF guidance for your situation.
How is staking taxed in Austria?
Staking rewards are typically ordinary income at fair market value when you obtain control. The receipt amount becomes cost basis for any subsequent disposal.
Can I offset crypto losses in Austria?
Most jurisdictions permit losses to offset same-source gains in the year of loss. Many also permit unused losses to be carried forward to future years. A small number (notably India's Section 115BBH regime) do not allow any loss offset for crypto. Verify with FMA, BMF.
Sources & References
- FMA, BMF — official guidance
- CryptoLawMap Research Team — Annual review, 2026