NFT Tax Calculator 2026 β€” Creator vs Collector Tax Comparison

Calculate tax on NFT sales. Collector: 28% collectibles rate for long-term gains. Creator: ordinary income + self-employment tax. See both scenarios.

$
Original price paid (incl. gas fees at purchase)
$
$
Marketplace commission + gas fees at sale
$
Royalties paid to original creator reduce your gain
$
$
Secondary sale royalties β€” ordinary SE income
$0
Tax on NFT Sale
$0
Gain / Income
0%
Tax Rate
$0
Self-Employment Tax
$0
Total Tax (Income + SE)
$0
Net After-Tax Proceeds

NFT Tax Breakdown

How This NFT Tax Calculator Works

Select your role β€” whether you're a collector/investor (bought the NFT and are reselling) or a creator (selling an NFT you made). The tax treatment is radically different between these two roles.

Collector / Investor

Net Proceeds = Sale Price βˆ’ Platform Fees βˆ’ Creator Royalties Paid
Gain = Net Proceeds βˆ’ Purchase Price (cost basis)
Short-term (≀1 yr): taxed at ordinary income rates (up to 37%)
Long-term (>1 yr): taxed at collectibles rate β€” max 28%
No self-employment tax

Creator

Sale Income = Sale Price βˆ’ Platform Fees (cost basis usually $0 for created NFTs)
Tax Type: Ordinary income (not capital gains)
Self-Employment Tax: 15.3% on net earnings (first $184,500 of SE income)
Royalties received: also ordinary income + SE tax

Example β€” $15,000 NFT Sale

Collector (purchased for $5,000, held 14 months, $75K other income, single):
Net proceeds: $15,000 βˆ’ $375 fees = $14,625
Long-term gain: $14,625 βˆ’ $5,000 = $9,625
Collectibles tax: $9,625 Γ— 28% = $2,695 | No SE tax

Creator (made the NFT, same sale price):
SE income: $14,625 | Income tax: ~$4,678 | SE tax: ~$2,069
Total: ~$6,747 vs collector's $2,695
Extended

Creator vs Collector Tax Comparison

See how the same NFT sale is taxed completely differently based on whether you created or purchased it

How the same NFT sale is taxed at different price points as a creator vs collector (long-term). Uses single filer, $75K other income, current inputs for fees.

Sale PriceCollector Tax (LT)Collector Eff. RateCreator Tax (inc. SE)Creator Eff. RateExtra Tax for Creator

Collector assumes $0 cost basis for clarity. Creator: full sale proceeds = SE income. Rates calculated at $75K other income, single filer.

Frequently Asked Questions

How are NFTs taxed when I sell them?
The IRS treats NFTs as property, similar to other collectibles. If you sell an NFT you purchased (as a collector/investor): short-term gains (held ≀1 year) are taxed at ordinary income rates up to 37%. Long-term gains (held >1 year) are taxed at the collectibles rate β€” up to 28% maximum (not the usual 20% cap for stocks). This 28% collectibles rate is a key distinction from regular capital assets.
How is NFT income taxed for creators?
NFT creators (artists, developers who create and sell their own NFTs) are treated differently from collectors. The sale of your own created NFT is ordinary income, not capital gains β€” taxed at rates up to 37%. It's also subject to self-employment tax (15.3% on the first $184,500, 2.9% above). So an NFT creator may owe both income tax AND self-employment tax on their NFT sales, effectively paying up to 50%+ in combined taxes at high income levels.
Are NFT royalties taxable?
Yes. Royalties received by NFT creators when their NFT is resold on secondary markets are ordinary income subject to both regular income tax and self-employment tax. Royalties are not capital gains. You must report them even if received in cryptocurrency β€” the fair market value of the crypto at the time of receipt is your taxable income.
What is the 28% collectibles tax rate for NFTs?
The IRS has indicated that some NFTs may qualify as "collectibles" under Section 408(m), which carries a maximum long-term capital gains rate of 28% (vs 20% for regular capital assets). The IRS Notice 2023-27 stated it was looking into NFT taxation but applied the collectibles analysis where NFT ownership confers rights to a physical collectible. In practice, most tax professionals treat long-term NFT gains at the 28% collectibles rate to be conservative.
Can I deduct platform fees and gas fees on NFT sales?
Yes. Platform fees (Marketplace commissions like OpenSea's 2.5%) paid when selling an NFT reduce your proceeds and thus your capital gain. Gas fees paid when purchasing an NFT increase your cost basis. Gas fees paid when selling reduce your proceeds. Royalties you pay to original creators as part of a sale are factored into your net proceeds. Keep records of all transaction fees.