Italy is set to toughen the regulation of digital assets, as it is the latest European country to cash in on crypto businesses and plans to tax digital trading as of next year.
With the country’s 2023 budget, the proposal provided that a 26% tax will be imposed on capital gains to digital assets for profits larger than 2,000 euros ( $2062.3) made from trading crypto. Digital coins and tokens have been treated as foreign currency by Italy’s tax authorities, which reveals lower taxation.
However, previously crypto used to be treated the same way as a foreign currency by Italy’s tax regime.
Nevertheless, the bill presented by Prime minister Giorgia Meloni’s government allows the taxpayers to declare the value of assets as of next year, paying a 14% tax. It aims to encourage the residents of Italy to express their holdings of digital assets in their tax returns.
Crypto platforms root their business in Europe
.However, several crypto firms have ventured into Europe to look for greener pastures for their companies and customers. In October, Portugal, one of the cryptos-friendly nations, revealed a similar tax of 28% for short-term gains on digital assets.
Bitpanda recently acquired an operating license in Germany, adding to its list of the places it has registered to carry out its operations, not forgetting Italy. One of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, Binance, has also been included in providing digital asset services to its consumers in France, Italy, and Spain.
Gemini platform has also announced its approval in European countries. Early last month, the company added five countries to its European capture, and earlier this week, it shared about its regulatory approval in Italy and Greece.
Different jurisdictions have suggested new rules and ways of taxing crypto and NFTs as they try to weigh the desire to promote innovation while enabling investors not to evade the tax regime.
It comes after a long rout in digital asset prices that has led to the downfall of various gigantic crypto platforms. The ongoing wave of cryptocurrency firms going bankrupt and others collapsing, including the recent crash of FTX firm, has made regulators tighten their scrutiny of asset class globally.
In early 2022, for the first time, British tax authorities seized NFTs for an investigation into tax fraud. They stated that it served as a caution to anyone who thinks they can use crypto assets to hide money from Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC).
Nonetheless, India’s tax on all crypto transactions over the summer has forced many homegrown firms to vanish. Recently, Costa Rica suggested mixing almost all tariffs on Bitcoin to attract foreign investors and technology companies into the country.
However, United States’ most recent tax authorities’ guidelines reveal that taxpayers should pay capital gains tax when they dispose of any digital asset, with NFTs, crypto, and stablecoins all in the same group.