🇬🇧 The Bitcoin & Crypto Accountant 🇬🇧🚀

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🇬🇧 The Bitcoin & Crypto Accountant 🇬🇧🚀

🇬🇧 The Bitcoin & Crypto Accountant 🇬🇧🚀

@BitcoinTaxUK

I’m Robin—accountant, Bitcoiner & crypto tax specialist. 🇬🇧 Offering full tax & accounting services. Owner of https://t.co/d506PaQEYK &

United Kingdom Katılım Haziran 2020
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🇬🇧 The Bitcoin & Crypto Accountant 🇬🇧🚀
I am a tax accountant living in the UK. I invest for long term growth potential relying on Compound Interest. Over time i have learned many valuable lessons and gained valuable insight into strategic investment. I have advised over 200 UK businesses on their personal and
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Tim
Tim@TimurNegru·
This one looks unreal. 7 rooms, 1h15m to Barcelona airport, a huge terrace and these views. Price: €480k ($547k) Location: L'Hospitalet de l'Infant, Tarragona Seems like a bargain!
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Duca
Duca@big_duca·
Some countries have the most annoying tax codes imaginable. Austria and UK, wtf are you guys doing over there.
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🇬🇧 The Bitcoin & Crypto Accountant 🇬🇧🚀
Status, no. Potential Timeline, roughly. It's draft legislation, not adopted policy. Technical consultation closes 7 Sep, it then goes into Finance Bill 2026-27 after the Budget, and the Chancellor decides the final contents. 6 Apr 2027 is a proposed commencement date, which will likely land before Royal Assent as usual. So "HMRC adopts" is wrong. "HMRC proposes, and probably gets there" is right. Closest we've ever been but still some potential hurdles.
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🇬🇧 The Bitcoin & Crypto Accountant 🇬🇧🚀
🚨 Huge UK Bitcoin & crypto tax update. 🚨 HMRC has published draft legislation that could change how Bitcoin & cryptoasset loans, liquidity pools and stablecoins are taxed from April 2027. These aren't law yet, but they're significant and worth watching. The two biggest proposals are: 📌 Cryptoasset loans & liquidity pools 📌 Tax treatment of stablecoins These have been debated and discussed for years because the current rules often don't reflect what people are actually doing in DeFi. Today, many DeFi transactions can trigger Capital Gains Tax even when you've not really "cashed out." For example: • Lending crypto • Providing liquidity • Moving between certain protocols The proposals aim to better align tax with the economic reality of these transactions. One proposal is a form of "no gain, no loss" treatment for certain qualifying cryptoasset loans and liquidity pool transactions. That could mean tax is deferred until a later disposal, rather than triggered when you enter the arrangement. The detail will matter. The Government is also reviewing how stablecoins should be taxed. At the moment, swapping BTC ➜ USDT or USDC is generally a disposal for CGT purposes. They're asking whether that treatment still makes sense as stablecoins become more widely used. A word of caution... These are draft measures, not final legislation. They may change before implementation, and they'll only apply from the date Parliament ultimately approves them. So don't change your reporting based on headlines alone. If you're using: • Bitcoin-backed loans • Aave • Compound • Liquidity pools • Stablecoins ...this is one of the biggest UK Bitcoin & crypto tax developments to follow over the next 12 months. I'll be reading through the draft legislation in detail and posting practical examples of what it could mean for UK Bitcoin and crypto holders. If there are changes that matter, I'll break them down in plain English. For anyone wanting to read the proposals themselves: 📄 Cryptoasset loans & liquidity pools: gov.uk/government/con…⁠ 📄 Stablecoin taxation: gov.uk/government/cal…⁠ Credit for my co contributors: @freddienew @danhowitt @CryptoTaxJme @CryptoUKAssoc @CryptaxUK @KnightbridgeTax @LouiseL57813551 @BenL33t And any others ive missed or couldn't find 😁
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Tim
Tim@TimurNegru·
@BitcoinTaxUK I saw two hotels and a few big villas. Are you still looking for an apartment on Como?
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Tim
Tim@TimurNegru·
Haven't done this in a while - would you like me to continue posting more cool European properties? Spain, Italy, Portugal or France?
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Block Tax
Block Tax@CryptoTaxG·
@BitcoinTaxUK The stablecoin question is the sleeper issue here — taxing BTC to USDC as a disposal punishes de-risking, not gains. If HMRC extends "no gain, no loss" treatment to stablecoin swaps too (not just loans/LPs), that's the change that actually moves the needle for DeFi users.
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Wil_ 🗝🎩
Wil_ 🗝🎩@it_wil_·
@BitcoinTaxUK how would the shitcoin sale be taxed? Capital gains on an original value of £0?
calle@callebtc

If you're a Bitcoiner then you might be lucky enough to receive two whole shitcoin airdrops this year. Here is what you need to know, including a few warnings and how you can stay safe. This year, two of the most eccentric Bitcoiners who couldn't succeessfully change Bitcoin even if they sold their mother, will finally fork off and find out how it feels to be a shitcoiner with your own chain: - Paul Sports, the BIP300 guy who hates Lightning more than I hate shitcoins, and - Luke Dashjr, the BIP110 guy who eats cats and can't stop thinking about CSAM. Strange characters, great to see them go their own way. What does that mean for you? If you have say 1 BTC to your name, you will now also have 1 Paul-BTC and 1 Luke-BTC. Even if your own Bitcoin is stored on a hardware wallet, you will now also have two shitcoins that are also secured with the same keys as your real Bitcoin. Do I have to do anything? No. This all happens automatically. You don't need to do anything, you wouldn't even notice anything has happened. After all, what do you care whether some dude has forked Bitcoin and decided to become a shitcoiner. You can chill. What if I want to dump it? Obviously both of these shitcoins will be worthless and will go to zero so you might be tempted to sell them. Many of us never played with shitcoins so this is a real temptation. In the most likely case, there won't even be an exchange where you can sell these coins because both are going to be pretty small and pathetic, unlike previous attacks on Bitcoin that tried to fork (Bitcoin Cash, Bitcoin Gold, ...). If you decide to move these shitcoins to an exchange (and assuming there will be wallets that help you do so), a few things are important to keep in mind: - There will be wallets that help you move your forked shitcoins. These wallets might ask you for your hardware wallet's seed phrase and pretend to be nice but will actually steal all your BTC. NEVER AND IN NO CIRCUMSTANCE ENTER YOUR HARDWARE WALLET'S SEED PHRASE INTO A COMPUTER. Wait for reputable wallets to appear that have been audited and thread extremely carefully. Even if you're a "pro Bitcoiner" you can lose your life savings if you mess this up. I repeat: If you enter your seed phrase into a malicious wallet, you could lose all of your REAL Bitcoins, not only that fake shit. - If you successfully moved your shitcoins off your wallet, you might be tempted to sell them on an exchange, assuming there will be one. Note that WHICHEVER SHITCOIN UTXO YOU DOXX (i.e. connect with your identity), ALSO DOXXES YOUR REAL BITCOIN. If you deposit your Luke-shitcoin to an exchange, that exchange WILL ALLSO SEE YOUR REAL BITCOIN on the real blockchain. If you send all your shitcoins to a random guy on the internet, that random guy will also see your entire real bitcoin stack. This is because the fork mirrors Bitcoin's history. So the summary is: - wallets will be released that appear to help you to move your shitcoins but they actually want to steal your Bitcoin. Dangerous. - if you move your shitcoins and connect them to your identity, then you also doxx your real bitcoins. Dangerous. - If you don't do anything, you're safe. Basically "play stupid games, win stupid prizes". Stay safe. Reject shitcoins.

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🇬🇧 The Bitcoin & Crypto Accountant 🇬🇧🚀
Just finished reading 'The Great Taking' by David Rogers Webb. Whether you agree with every conclusion or not, it genuinely made me stop and think about what it actually means to "own" financial assets. If you have stocks, bonds or ETFs, it's worth reading. The main argument is that the global financial system has quietly changed over decades. The legal structure behind ownership isn't what most people think it is. Most people assume their investments are their property. Webb argues that's no longer really the case. One thing that really stood out to me was the idea of a "security entitlement." The argument is that you don't directly own the shares sitting in your brokerage account. Instead, you have a claim through layers of intermediaries. That's a distinction most people have never even considered. As a Bitcoiner, it immediately reminded me of: "Not your keys, not your coins." I've always applied that to Bitcoin. I'd never really thought about how similar questions could apply to traditional financial assets. Webb argues that during a major financial crisis, secured creditors sit at the front of the queue. If that's true, the legal protections many investors assume they have may not work the way they expect when they're actually needed. He also looks back at history. Bank closures. Gold confiscation. Whether you think the comparison is fair or not, it's a reminder that governments and financial systems have changed the rules before. The part I found most thought-provoking was where he links all of this to CBDCs. His argument is that a future financial crisis could become the catalyst for moving people into a fully digital monetary system with far greater control. Again, you don't have to agree but it's an interesting perspective. Reading it reinforced something I've believed for a while. Counterparty risk matters. The more people standing between you and your wealth, the more questions you should be asking about who actually owns what when things go wrong. I'm not saying the book is definitely right about everything. But it asks questions that I don't think enough people are asking. If nothing else, it'll make you think differently about custody, ownership and why so many Bitcoiners obsess over self-custody. Definitely worth the read.
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Wealth Squad Chris
Wealth Squad Chris@Chrissssjohnson·
Get money, stay out the way and do fly shit
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Peter Lane
Peter Lane@Peterlane1985·
@I_amMukhtar @grok how would this be a benefit? Surely income tax of 45% would apply to him for income?
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Mukhtar
Mukhtar@I_amMukhtar·
Nigel Farage is paying himself £50,000 a year in rent for a studio space located in one of his own properties through his company, Thorn in the Side Ltd, using a tax loophole.
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🇬🇧 The Bitcoin & Crypto Accountant 🇬🇧🚀
@ItsJamesHall 100% fixing We need to review the NHS. How is the money spent. I would say far too much admin functions absorb money. We need clinical spend to increase. I personally would recommend elected CEO's of each trust to aid improvement on a trust by trust level.
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James Hall
James Hall@ItsJamesHall·
UK tax revenue is set to hit 37.4% of GDP in 2026–27, the highest since WW2. Yet A&E waits, cancer care and diagnostics are still falling short of target, even as the middle class pays more through fiscal drag. Is the answer more tax, or fixing how the current £1.2 trillion is spent?
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The Secret Accountant
The Secret Accountant@TheSecretAcct·
Shall we club together and buy a football club? @KieranMaguire We could do a social media fundraise. A great way to lose lots of money but it would be fun!
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