UK HMRC mandates crypto exchanges must share user data starting 2026

Share This Post

Digital asset service providers in the UK must submit customer data to His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) beginning Jan. 1, 2026.

According to a May 14 update on the financial authority’s website, this move follows the adoption of the OECD’s Cryptoasset Reporting Framework (CARF), which mandates global tax transparency standards for digital assets.

Under the rules, all UK-based crypto service providers, including exchanges, brokers, and wallet operators, must collect details on every user. However, reporting will be limited to users who are tax residents in the UK or other countries that have adopted CARF.

These details include a customer’s full name, address, country of residence, wallet addresses, and a breakdown of crypto transactions, including transfers, disposals, gross proceeds, and fair market values of the digital assets.

HMRC requires the first report to be filed by May 31, 2027. This will cover transaction data for the 2026 calendar year.

After that, the service providers must submit annual reports by May 31 for the previous year. If a firm has no reportable data in a given year, it will not be required to file.

Meanwhile, failure to comply with these requirements could result in penalties of up to £300 per user. HMRC stated that sanctions apply for non-reporting, late submissions, or if the submitted data is incomplete, inaccurate, or unverified.

UK’s crypto regulatory efforts

The reporting framework is part of a broader UK effort to bring digital assets under formal financial regulation.

In April, the UK Treasury introduced a draft amendment to the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. The proposed changes aim to regulate key areas of the crypto sector, including stablecoins, staking services, and digital asset custody.

Once enacted, the rules will place crypto firms under the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) oversight. It would also require the firms to secure FCA authorization and comply with standards that govern traditional financial services.

The authorities argued that these changes are necessary to boost investor confidence, support the crypto industry’s growth, and protect UK investors.

The post UK HMRC mandates crypto exchanges must share user data starting 2026 appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Capital A, Standard Chartered Malaysia Team up to Explore Ringgit Backed Stablecoin

Capital A and Standard Chartered Bank Malaysia have signed an agreement to explore developing and testing a ringgit‑denominated stablecoin within Bank Negara Malaysia’s Digital Asset Innovation

Robinhood is constructing a “regional triangle” that unlocks the one thing US regulators won’t permit

Robinhood has spent the past few years trying to outgrow its meme-stock reputation, and the clearest sign that it is thinking differently now sits far from Menlo Park In early December, the company

Here’s What Could Happen if XRP ETFs Reach $10 Billion

The post Here’s What Could Happen if XRP ETFs Reach $10 Billion appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News Interest in XRP exchange traded funds is growing quickly after another product received

Render Network Targets Cloud Bottlenecks With Distributed GPU Platform

The Render Network Foundation has launched Dispersed, a distributed GPU computing platform aimed at easing growing constraints in centralized cloud infrastructure as global artificial intelligence

Bitcoin Takes Backseat As Treasury’s Cash Flow Becomes Must-Watch Chart – Here’s Why

Bitcoin has been the undisputed dominant force in the financial world In a swift change of financial gravity, the spotlight has shifted from the decentralized digital asset to the US government

SEC Sets Bullish Tone on On-Chain Markets as Blockchain Settlement Becomes Strategic Priority

The SEC is signaling a decisive push to move US financial markets onto blockchain infrastructure, framing on-chain settlement as a priority upgrade that could reshape post-trade systems and