The Internal Revenue Service wants people who claim tax deductions for donating cryptocurrency to charity to first receive a "qualified appraisal" of the value if it exceeds $5,000.
In a
However, the IRS Chief Counsel Memorandum notes that it should not be cited or used as precedent, and it may even contradict a longtime precedent. "While the position of the IRS is not a surprise, it appears to frustrate, and contradict, Congress' intent of encouraging taxpayers to make donations to charities and only requiring appraisals for donations of property that cannot be readily valued," legal news site
In its discussion, the IRS Chief Counsel's office pointed to 2014 guidance from the IRS, in
Section 170 of the Tax Code generally allows a deduction for charitable contributions, but only if it's verified under the regulations. To claim a charitable contribution deduction, a taxpayer has to satisfy certain substantiation requirements. In general, for contributions of property for which a deduction of more than $5,000 is claimed, the taxpayer needs to obtain a qualified appraisal of the property for the tax year in which the contribution is claimed and provide the information regarding the property and the appraisal as required. A "qualified appraiser" is someone who has earned an appraisal designation from a recognized professional appraiser organization or has otherwise met the minimum education and experience requirements under the regulations, regularly performs appraisals for which they're compensated, and meets other requirements. A qualified appraisal generally isn't required, though, for donations of cash, stock in trade, inventory, property primarily held for sale to customers in the ordinary course of business, publicly traded securities, intellectual property and certain vehicles.
In this case, no exception to the qualified appraisal requirements applies because cryptocurrency is neither cash, a publicly traded security, or any other type of property listed in the Tax Code. If a taxpayer claims a charitable contribution deduction of over $5,000 for the donated cryptocurrency, a qualified appraisal is thus required.
As for why the reasonable cause exception doesn't apply, the memo cites a Tax Court case from last year,