βΏ South Dakota Crypto Tax Calculator 2026
Calculate federal and state capital gains tax on cryptocurrency for South Dakota (SD) residents. State tax rate: 0%. No state income tax.
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South Dakota has NO state income tax! Your crypto gains are only subject to federal capital gains tax.
π Crypto Tax Calculator
π Tax Breakdown
| Tax Component | Rate | Amount |
|---|
π‘ South Dakota Crypto Tax Rules
| Tax Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| State Tax Rate | 0% (top marginal rate) |
| Capital Gains Treatment | no state tax |
| Short-Term Federal Rate | 10% - 37% (ordinary income rates) |
| Long-Term Federal Rate | 0%, 15%, or 20% |
| Net Investment Income Tax | 3.8% on income over $200K (single) / $250K (married) |
| Median Household Income | $60,000 |
π Taxable vs Non-Taxable Crypto Events
| Event | Taxable? |
|---|---|
| Selling crypto for USD/cash | Yes β capital gain/loss |
| Trading one crypto for another | Yes β capital gain/loss |
| Using crypto to buy goods/services | Yes β capital gain/loss |
| Receiving crypto as payment/salary | Yes β ordinary income |
| Mining crypto | Yes β ordinary income at fair market value |
| Staking rewards | Yes β ordinary income when received |
| Airdrops | Yes β ordinary income when received |
| NFT sales | Yes β capital gain/loss |
| DeFi yield farming | Yes β ordinary income + potential capital gains |
| Buying crypto with USD | No β not a taxable event |
| Transferring between your own wallets | No β not a taxable event |
| Gifting crypto (under $18K) | No β but gift tax rules apply above $18K |
| Donating crypto to charity | No β may qualify for tax deduction |
π° Tax-Loss Harvesting Tips for South Dakota
π‘ You can offset crypto gains with crypto losses. If you sold crypto at a loss, you can deduct up to $3,000/year against ordinary income and carry forward unlimited losses to future years.
| Strategy | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Harvest Losses | Sell losing positions before year-end to offset gains. No wash sale rule for crypto (as of 2025). |
| Long-Term Holding | Hold crypto 1+ year for 0%, 15%, or 20% federal rate vs up to 37% short-term rate. |
| Gift to Charity | Donate appreciated crypto to avoid capital gains and get a tax deduction. |
| Use Specific ID | Choose which lots to sell (highest cost basis first) to minimize gains. |
| State Advantage | Living in South Dakota already saves you state tax on crypto gains! |
β South Dakota Crypto Tax FAQ
How is cryptocurrency taxed in South Dakota?
In South Dakota, cryptocurrency is treated as property for tax purposes (following IRS guidance). When you sell, trade, or use crypto, you trigger a taxable event. South Dakota has no state income tax, so you only pay federal capital gains tax.
What's the difference between short-term and long-term crypto gains?
Short-term gains (held less than 1 year) are taxed at ordinary income rates β up to 37% federal. Long-term gains (held 1 year or more) qualify for preferential rates: 0%, 15%, or 20% federal. The difference can save you thousands of dollars.
Do I need to report crypto on my South Dakota tax return?
South Dakota has no state income tax, so there is no state filing requirement for crypto gains. However, you must report all crypto transactions on your federal tax return (Form 8949 and Schedule D).
How are crypto mining and staking rewards taxed in South Dakota?
Mining income and staking rewards are taxed as ordinary income at fair market value when received. This applies at both the federal level. When you later sell the mined/staked crypto, any additional gain is taxed as a capital gain.
Can I deduct crypto losses in South Dakota?
Yes. You can offset capital gains with capital losses. If your losses exceed your gains, you can deduct up to $3,000 per year against ordinary income ($1,500 if married filing separately). Remaining losses carry forward to future tax years indefinitely.
Is there a wash sale rule for crypto?
As of 2025, the IRS wash sale rule does NOT apply to cryptocurrency (it only applies to securities). This means you can sell crypto at a loss and immediately repurchase it to harvest the tax loss. However, legislation to close this loophole has been proposed, so this may change.