Next scheduled rescrape ... never
Version 1
Last scraped
Edited on 12/07/2025, 12:00:52 UTC
Don't do what you will make you finally shoot yourself on your own feet because you want to play a smart one. Bypassing government tax is a big offensive and you should know the consequences of that especially when it involves crypto assets.

Play safe by contacting a professional on tax for him to advice you on what to do just as other posters above have mentioned.

This is my intention. For now I don't have to do crazy things to get away with low tax or no tax.
My country has a annual 10k euro tax exemption limit per person. So I just donate 10k to 4-5 close relatives, convert it to fiat tax free, reinvest etc.

When the portfolio grows I will definitely need a tax lawyer. I have found a good one. He sets up foreign companies in countries with low taxes. Sadly it is the only way to legally avoid astronomical taxes on crypto earnings in my country. I don't see taxation on bitcoin profit as fair. I see it like a conversion fee of 50% when you convert a failing currency like the Argentinian peso, to USD or Euro. Because bitcoin is money, there should be absolutely no tax on converting it to other forms of money no matter how bad those currencies are failing.
Original archived Re: 2 countries. Which tax man would be alerted by exchanges?
Scraped on 12/07/2025, 11:31:14 UTC
Don't do what you will make you finally shoot yourself on your own feet because you want to play a smart one. Bypassing government tax is a big offensive and you should know the consequences of that especially when it involves crypto assets.

Play safe by contacting a professional on tax for him to advice you on what to do just as other posters above have mentioned.

This is my intention. For now I don't have to do crazy things to get away with low tax or no tax.
My country has a annual 10k euro tax exemption limit per person. So I just donate 10k to 4-5 close relatives, convert it to fiat tax free, reinvest etc.

When the portfolio grows I will definitely need a tax lawyer. I have found a good one. He sets up foreign companies in countries with low taxes. Sadly it is the only way to legally avoid astronomical taxes on crypto earnings in my country. I don't see taxation on bitcoin profit as fair. I see it like a conversion fee of 50% when you convert a failing currency like the Argentinian peso, to USD or Euro. Because bitcoin is money, there should be absolutely no tax on converting it to other forms of money no matter how bad those are.