DeFi, NFT & Staking Tax Guide: How They're Taxed (2026)
Tax & Regulations · CryptoGate Team · May 18, 2026 · 8 min read

DeFi, NFT & Staking Tax Guide: How They're Taxed (2026)

Staking rewards, DeFi liquidity, NFT sales, airdrops and yield farming each carry their own tax rules. This 2026 guide explains how the most complex crypto activities are taxed.

How are DeFi, staking, and NFTs taxed? In most countries, staking rewards, airdrops, hard forks, and lending interest are taxed as income at their value when you receive them, while selling NFTs or swapping tokens in DeFi triggers capital gains tax. This guide breaks down the tax treatment of the most complex crypto activities — staking, liquidity providing, yield farming, NFTs, airdrops, hard forks, and wrapped tokens — with a focus on EU and UK approaches.

Why Complex Crypto Activities Are a Tax Challenge

Traditional tax law was written for simple transactions: you buy an asset, you sell it, you pay tax on the gain. Cryptocurrency introduces dozens of new activity types — staking, liquidity providing, yield farming, wrapped tokens, NFT royalties — that do not map cleanly onto existing categories.

Tax authorities globally are playing catch-up, issuing guidance on new products as they become significant. The result is that the tax treatment of complex crypto activities varies more between countries, and within countries changes more frequently, than for simple spot trading. What follows is the current state of guidance in most major jurisdictions, with a focus on EU and UK approaches.

How Is Staking Taxed?

When you stake cryptocurrency to earn rewards, the core question is: are those rewards income when received, or only when sold?

Most jurisdictions have settled on the "income when received" position. This means:

This is the position taken in the UK (HMRC), Germany, Poland, and increasingly France. The US has had a legal challenge to this approach (the Jarrett case argued that staking creates new property and should not be taxed until sold), but the IRS has maintained the "income when received" position.

How Is DeFi Liquidity Providing Taxed?

Providing liquidity to a decentralised exchange (DEX) like Uniswap or Curve involves depositing two tokens into a liquidity pool and receiving LP tokens in return. The tax treatment depends on whether this is treated as a disposal of the original tokens.

In most countries, depositing tokens into a liquidity pool is treated as a taxable disposal at the current market value — because you are giving up ownership of those specific tokens. Your LP tokens have a cost basis equal to the value of the tokens you deposited.

When you withdraw from the pool, you receive tokens back. If the ratio has changed (due to impermanent loss or gain), this creates another taxable event: you disposed of the LP tokens and received new tokens.

Impermanent loss is not typically a deductible loss until you actually withdraw from the pool and crystallise the difference.

How Is Yield Farming and Lending Taxed?

Yield farming involves moving tokens between protocols to maximise returns. Each move that constitutes a disposal (exchanging one token for another) is a taxable event in most jurisdictions.

Interest earned through lending protocols (e.g. Aave, Compound) is generally treated as ordinary income at the time of receipt, similar to bank interest. This is the position in the UK, Germany, and Poland.

How Are NFT Sales Taxed?

Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are generally treated as capital assets in most countries. When you sell an NFT at a profit, you owe capital gains tax on the difference between your sale proceeds and your original cost basis (what you paid to create or purchase the NFT, plus any gas fees).

Key nuances:

How Are Airdrops Taxed?

Receiving free tokens in an airdrop is taxable in most jurisdictions, typically as ordinary income at fair market value when you receive them (or when you first have the ability to control and use them).

Germany has a notable exception: if an airdrop is entirely unsolicited and you performed no action to receive it, some advisors argue it is not taxable income under German law. However, this is contested and not confirmed by official guidance.

In Poland, airdrops are treated as income under PIT rules. In the UK, HMRC distinguishes between airdrops received for a service (taxable income) and those with no conditions attached (may be capital gains when sold).

How Are Hard Forks Taxed?

When a blockchain forks and you receive new tokens, most tax authorities treat the received tokens as income at fair market value when you gain control of them (similar to airdrops). The original tokens are unaffected; only the new tokens create a taxable event.

Are Wrapped Tokens and Bridges Taxable?

Wrapping a token (e.g. converting ETH to WETH) or bridging assets between blockchains raises the question of whether this constitutes a disposal. Most tax authorities have not issued specific guidance.

The prevailing interpretation in the UK and Germany is that wrapping is a disposal if you are exchanging one asset for a technically different one — even if economically equivalent. WETH is a different token contract than ETH, so the swap may trigger a capital gain or loss.

Using bridges that lock your original token and issue a receipt token on another chain may similarly be treated as a disposal in some jurisdictions.

How DeFi and NFT Activities Are Taxed: Quick Reference

ActivityTypical tax treatmentWhen taxed
Staking rewardsOrdinary incomeAt receipt (then CGT on later gain)
Lending interestOrdinary incomeAt receipt
Providing liquidityCapital gains (disposal)On deposit and on withdrawal
Yield farming swapsCapital gainsEach token-for-token swap
Selling an NFTCapital gains (or business income)On sale
NFT royaltiesOrdinary incomeOn receipt
Airdrops & hard forksUsually ordinary incomeWhen you control the tokens
Wrapping / bridgingOften a disposal (varies)On the wrap or bridge

Treatments above are general patterns across major jurisdictions and can differ in your country — for the fundamentals, see our complete crypto tax guide, and compare rates across the EU in our crypto tax in Europe comparison.

Practical Guidance for Complex Activities

Once you have your records, our step-by-step guide to reporting crypto on your taxes walks through filing. If you accept crypto for an NFT or DeFi-adjacent business, you can accept payments straight to your own wallet with CryptoGate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I pay tax on staking rewards?

In most countries yes. Staking rewards are taxed as ordinary income at their fair market value on the day you receive them. That value also becomes your cost basis, so you pay capital gains tax only on any further appreciation when you later sell.

Are NFTs taxed when I sell them?

Yes. Selling an NFT at a profit triggers capital gains tax on the difference between your proceeds and your cost basis (purchase or mint cost plus gas). If you mint and sell NFTs as a business, profits may instead be taxed as business income.

Is providing DeFi liquidity a taxable event?

In most jurisdictions, depositing tokens into a liquidity pool is treated as a taxable disposal at market value, and withdrawing is another disposal of your LP tokens. Treatment varies, so document each deposit and withdrawal carefully.

Are airdrops taxable?

Usually yes, as ordinary income at fair market value when you can control the tokens. Some jurisdictions distinguish airdrops received for a service from purely unsolicited ones, and Germany has a contested exemption argument for fully unsolicited airdrops.

Is wrapping ETH to WETH a taxable event?

It can be. In the UK and Germany the prevailing interpretation is that wrapping swaps one token contract for a technically different one, which may count as a disposal and trigger a capital gain or loss. Guidance is limited, so treat it cautiously.

Is this article tax advice?

No. This is general information reflecting evolving guidance, not tax advice. DeFi, NFT, and staking rules change often and differ by country, so confirm your position with a qualified tax professional.

This article reflects general guidance in an area of active regulatory development and does not constitute tax advice. Rules differ by jurisdiction and change frequently — always verify current rules with a qualified tax professional.

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