Cryptocurrency Tax Reporting in Delaware, OH
The IRS treats cryptocurrency as property — meaning every sale, every trade, and every spending event creates a taxable gain or loss. Delaware crypto traders often realize after April 15 that buying Bitcoin in 2021, trading some for ETH in 2022, and spending some on goods in 2023 created multiple taxable events. We use crypto tax software (CoinTracker, Koinly, TokenTax) to import exchange data, calculate cost basis, and produce IRS-ready Form 8949 reporting.
Serving Delaware, Delaware County · 22 miles from our Morse Rd office (~32 min drive)
Simple (1 exchange, <100 transactions): $275
Delaware · Central Ohio
Why this Cryptocurrency Tax Reporting page is written for Delaware
Delaware sits in Central Ohio, small-town main streets, county-seat government employers, and increasingly residential growth from Columbus-area buyers seeking lower cost of living. Delaware County, where Delaware is located, is a sizable Ohio city where most county-level vital records and document services are available locally.
In Central Ohio, taxpayers most often come to us for ITIN preparation, mixed-status returns, and prior-year cleanup — the kind of work that requires careful identity-document review. For Delaware taxpayers, we review every W-2, 1099, ITIN letter, and dependent ID against the return before anything is e-filed or mailed.
a smaller-town demographic with growing immigrant families who have moved out from Columbus for school district choices and housing — and Delaware, with a population near 41,302, reflects that mix in its schools, workplaces, and houses of worship.
easy state-route access into Columbus — typically a single-highway drive with no transfers needed. From Delaware (ZIP 43015), the trip is roughly 22 miles each way.
At roughly 22 miles (~32 min drive) from Delaware, we plan return prep to finish in one sitting whenever possible. We also serve families across the rest of Central Ohio, where many of our Delaware clients have relatives, coworkers, and shared community ties.
Our Delaware clients commonly include families served by Delaware City Schools and workers and patients tied to OhioHealth Grady Memorial Hospital.
Cryptocurrency Tax Reporting for Delaware Residents
Delaware crypto traders face the same Form 8949 reporting rules as everyone else: every sale, every trade, every spend is a taxable event. We use professional crypto tax software (CoinTracker, Koinly) to import your exchange data, calculate cost basis, and produce IRS-ready reporting that matches what the exchanges report to the IRS.
What We Handle
Form 8949 and Schedule D crypto reporting
Cost basis calculation across multiple wallets/exchanges
Crypto-to-crypto trade tax reporting
Mining income (Schedule C) and staking rewards
DeFi: liquidity provision, lending, yield farming
NFT minting, buying, and selling tax treatment
Hard fork and airdrop income recognition
Foreign exchange (FBAR/Form 8938) reporting if applicable
Pricing
Simple (1 exchange, <100 transactions): $275. Moderate (multiple exchanges, 100-1000 transactions): $450. Complex (DeFi, NFTs, mining, foreign exchanges): $700+.
Turnaround
3-5 business days for clean exchange exports. Complex cases with reconciliation: 1-2 weeks.
What to Bring
Getting to Our Office from Delaware
Distance
22 miles
Drive Time
~32 minutes
From
Central Ohio
From Delaware, head toward Columbus and exit onto Morse Rd. Our office is at 3185 Morse Rd, Suite 15 — between Cleveland Ave and I-71. Free on-site parking, walk-ins welcome every day Mon–Sat 10am–6pm, Sun 10am–4pm.
Get turn-by-turn directions on Google Maps →Frequently Asked Questions
I bought crypto and never sold. Do I owe taxes?+
No — buying and holding crypto is not a taxable event. You owe taxes only when you sell, trade, spend, or earn crypto. Holding is fine; HODL doesn't trigger taxes. Just keep your purchase records (cost basis) for when you eventually do sell.
I traded Bitcoin for Ethereum. Is that taxable?+
Yes. Crypto-to-crypto trades are taxable as if you sold Bitcoin for USD, then bought Ethereum with USD. You owe capital gains tax on the difference between your Bitcoin cost basis and its fair market value at the time of the trade. Many traders miss this and only report fiat conversions.
I lost crypto in a hack or rug pull. Can I deduct it?+
Theft losses on investment property were eliminated for tax years 2018-2025 by the TCJA, with limited exceptions. Capital losses from worthless investments (provable rug pulls) may still be claimable in some cases. Lost passwords / hardware wallets with provable inability to access — we evaluate case by case.
How far is your office from Delaware?+
Our office at 3185 Morse Rd, Suite 15, Columbus is approximately 22 miles from Delaware — typically a 32-minute drive. We're on the north side of Columbus between Cleveland Ave and I-71 with free parking. Walk in any day Monday through Saturday 10am–6pm, or Sunday 10am–4pm.
Do Delaware residents owe school district income tax?+
If you live within the Delaware City Schools boundary, you may owe Ohio school district income tax on top of federal and Ohio IT-1040 state tax. The SD-100 return is filed alongside your Ohio return. We handle all three (federal, state, school district) as part of standard tax preparation.
Cryptocurrency Tax Reporting in Nearby Cities
Also serving these Central Ohio communities:
Crypto Tax Filing in Delaware
We use professional crypto tax software. Walk in to our Delaware-area office with your exchange exports.
3185 Morse Rd, Ste 15, Columbus, OH 43231 · Mon–Sat 10am–6pm · Sun 10am–4pm