Calculate tax treatment of crypto-collateralized loans. Initial borrowing is tax-free. Liquidation is a taxable disposal at FMV. Interest deductible if used for investment. Crypto repayment is taxable.
How Crypto Loan Taxation Works
Crypto-collateralized loans work like home equity loans for tax purposes. You pledge crypto, receive cash β no taxable event. The crypto remains your property with your original basis. Tax consequences arise at liquidation (forced sale of collateral), on repayment with crypto (voluntary disposal), or when deducting interest.
Tax Treatment Summary
Initial Loan: NOT taxable β borrowing is not income
Liquidation Tax = MAX(0, FMV at Liquidation β Basis) Γ Capital Gains Rate
Interest (investment use): Deductible on Form 4952 vs net investment income
Repayment with crypto: Taxable disposal at FMV on repayment date
LTV risk: Liquidation triggered when collateral value drops below required ratio
Example
$100K BTC collateral (basis $20K), $50K loan at 6%, single, $150K other income:
Initial loan: $0 tax
If liquidated at $100K: gain = $100K β $20K = $80K (long-term)
LT tax on $80K at ~15%: ~$12,000
Annual interest: $50,000 Γ 6% = $3,000 (deductible if investment use)
Interest tax savings: $3,000 Γ 22% = ~$660/year
True cost of loan: interest paid minus deduction savings
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a crypto-collateralized loan a taxable event?
No β the initial act of borrowing against your crypto collateral is not a taxable event. Borrowing money (whether secured by a house, crypto, or other assets) is not income. This is similar to a home equity line of credit: you don't recognize gain when you pledge your home and receive cash. The IRS has not explicitly ruled on crypto loans but borrowing is treated as nontaxable under general tax principles. The crypto remains your property and your cost basis is unchanged.
What happens if my crypto collateral is liquidated?
Liquidation of your crypto collateral is a taxable disposal. When the lender seizes and sells your collateral (e.g., because the loan-to-value ratio exceeded the threshold), you have a taxable capital gain or loss equal to the fair market value at liquidation minus your original cost basis. The character (short-term or long-term) depends on how long you held the crypto before liquidation. This can be a large surprise tax bill if you had a low cost basis in highly appreciated crypto.
Is crypto loan interest deductible?
It depends on use. If you use the loan proceeds for investment purposes, the interest may be deductible as investment interest expense on Form 4952, subject to the net investment income limitation. If you use the proceeds for personal expenses, the interest is generally not deductible (personal interest). If used for a business, it may be deductible as a business expense. Keep clear records of how loan proceeds are used to support the deduction.
Is repaying a crypto loan with cryptocurrency a taxable event?
Yes. If you repay a crypto loan using cryptocurrency (rather than cash), the repayment is treated as a sale of that crypto at its fair market value on the date of repayment. You recognize a capital gain or loss equal to FMV at repayment minus your basis in the crypto used for repayment. This is another often-overlooked tax consequence of crypto lending. Repaying with cash is not taxable; repaying with crypto is.
Which platforms offer crypto-collateralized loans in 2026?
Decentralized lending protocols like Aave and Compound allow users to deposit crypto as collateral and borrow stablecoins or other assets. Centralized platforms have evolved after 2022β2023 bankruptcies (Celsius, BlockFi, Voyager). In 2026, Coinbase, Nexo, and DeFi protocols remain active options. Interest rates vary from 2%β12% depending on collateral, LTV ratio, and market conditions. Always verify the platform's regulatory status and custody risk before depositing collateral.