"Tax evasion is not a crime, it is self-defense. Because when you pay taxes, you are financing the very system that steals and oppresses people. Taxes are coercive...
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The obligation to declare crypto assets in Income Tax.
According to RFB Normative Instruction No. 1,888/2019, it remains valid in 2025. In accordance with Federal Revenue guidelines, cryptoassets acquired for amounts equal to or greater than R$5,000 per category must be informed in the declaration of assets and rights. If a taxpayer has, for example, R$4,500 in Bitcoin and R$3,000 in Ethereum, they will not need to declare, as the acquisition values are below the established limit.
If there is a sale and the profit obtained exceeds R$35,000 in a single month, the taxpayer must calculate the capital gain (difference between the purchase price and the sale price) and pay the tax due, with rates varying from 15% to 22.5%. This tax must be paid by the last business day of the month following the transaction.
The R$5,000 limit refers to the acquisition cost, not appreciation or profit. Therefore, even if the asset appreciates, the declaration is only required if sales in the month exceed R$35 thousand.
Transactions carried out directly between people (peer-to-peer), without intermediaries such as exchanges, do not exempt the declaration or payment of taxes. The blockchain records all transactions, making them traceable. The IRS can monitor transactions using tools such as the DeCripto platform, both on national and international exchanges.
Therefore, it is essential that taxpayers keep detailed records of all transactions and comply with tax regulations to avoid legal and financial problems. Federal Revenue inspection is more rigorous, making compliance essential. $BTC
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