Or just stay below your CGT threshold.
If you need to sell a large amount, e.g. to buy a house
In my country the threshold is 40 EUR/transaction for a total of 120 EUR/year.
Between this tiny amount and the amounts needed to buy a house there are plenty of use cases for wanting to sell Bitcoin for fiat without KYC.
I've started accumulating from scratch; wouldn't the whole amount get taxed since it's basically a source of income? That's why I thought it'd be 24%.
You could have been mining those coins long ago. Or you could have been mining altcoins with your computer and sell for bitcoin.
It's not mandatory you've actually worked for them, especially if you already have a day job...
While there isn't an official tax framework for cryptocurrencies yet, withdrawing a few thousand euros to my bank account wouldn't look too good, which is my main concern.
If only the bank is your concern then a crypto card may do the job, just they need KYC and you may not be able to withdraw more than 2-300 EUR/day at the ATMs. You can, however, use them for daily shopping. Just (again) yeah, they're KYC unless you go for the very "underground" anon cards AlexPCS is selling.