On Monday, Rep. Rudy Yakym (IN-02) introduced the Less Tax Paperwork for Digital Asset Owners Act, legislation to reduce the administrative burden on Americans who use digital assets by streamlining federal tax reporting requirements.
“President Trump has set a clear goal: make America the crypto capital of the world. This bill does exactly that by stripping away the unnecessary red tape that makes digital asset ownership needlessly complicated for everyday Americans,” Rep. Rudy Yakym said. “When the paperwork is simpler, compliance goes up and innovation follows. This is common-sense tax reform.”
“Digital assets are an increasingly popular option for folks engaging in common commercial transactions like paying for goods and services - including small, routine purchases,” Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith (MO-08) said. “However, the current tax treatment of digital asset transactions is needlessly burdensome for all involved, from those engaging in everyday commerce to regulators having to comb through a mountain of paperwork related to each individual transaction. The Less Tax Paperwork for Digital Asset Owners Act will streamline and make the tax treatment of digital assets more efficient by recognizing certain transactions should not need an accountant to execute. Representative Yakym is leading the charge in bringing some commonsense into the tax treatment of digital asset transactions and promoting greater administrability of our tax laws so that more Americans can participate in the digital asset economy.”
Read the full bill text HERE.
Background:
The digital asset market reached $3 trillion in total capitalization in 2025, and estimates show up to 30% of American adults own digital assets. Yet under current law, every digital asset transaction, no matter how small or routine, triggers separate reporting obligations.
That patchwork of requirements is punitive, administratively inefficient, and discourages the kind of innovation President Trump has made a national priority.
The Less Tax Paperwork for Digital Asset Owners Act reduces burden and promotes compliance by:
-
Excluding gain or loss on digital assets used to pay a network fee. Routine, small-dollar network transactions will no longer trigger a reporting event;
-
Excluding gain or loss on regulated U.S. dollar stablecoins. Transactions in dollar-backed stablecoins are treated as the dollar equivalents they are; and
-
Creating an election for a simplified accounting method for digital assets, giving owners a cleaner, more manageable way to track and report their holdings.
Together, these changes provide taxpayers with certainty, reduce burden, promote compliance, and position the United States to lead the global digital economy.
U.S. Postal Service will be closed in observance of Juneteenth, June 19
U.S. Senaator Young, colleagues introduce bipartisan bill to establish national commission on robotics
Plymouth High School Baseball Coach Ryan Wolfe steps down after 14 seasons
Marshall County Council approves $1.58 million vehicle lease for Highway Department
City Council member pushes for safer Greenway Trail crossing on East Jefferson Street
Town of Argos seeks input on its Argos 2040 Comprehensive Plan
2 arrested for driving while suspended Tuesday; 1 also faces felony OWI
REES Theatre to host free screening of documentary "Kiss the Ground" June 18
