Boston, MA · Crypto Tax Accountants

Find a Crypto Tax Accountant in Boston, MA

CPAs who actually understand crypto — DeFi, NFTs, staking, mining, airdrops, and cross-chain transactions. Form 8949 done correctly the first time, with audit-defensible cost basis. Serving Boston, MA and the surrounding region — Boston-area accountants serve life sciences, higher education, financial services, and innovation-economy startups.

Why Boston clients hire crypto tax

Local context for crypto tax accountants in Boston, MA

Dominant local industries

  • Life sciences & biotech
  • Higher education & nonprofits
  • Asset management & hedge funds
  • Tech & robotics startups
  • Healthcare & medical groups

Massachusetts tax climate

Massachusetts has a 5% flat personal income tax plus a 4% surtax on income above $1M (the 'Millionaires Tax'), and an 8% corporate excise tax. The state offers a pass-through entity excise (PTE) election to mitigate federal SALT caps. Sales tax is 6.25% with no local add-on.

Key local deadline

Mar 15

Massachusetts partnership and S-corp returns; PTE election made on the return.

When to hire

  • You traded across multiple exchanges, wallets, or DeFi protocols
  • You received airdrops, staking rewards, or NFTs
  • Your exchange's cost basis report is missing or obviously wrong
  • You got an IRS Letter 6173, 6174, or 6174-A
  • You're mining, running validators, or earning crypto as income

What they do

  • Aggregate transactions from CEX, DEX, and on-chain wallets
  • Calculate cost basis using FIFO, LIFO, HIFO, or specific ID
  • Prepare Form 8949 and Schedule D for capital gains/losses
  • Report staking, mining, and airdrop income on Schedule 1 or C
  • Handle FBAR/FATCA and offshore exchange reporting where applicable

Typical fees

What it costs

Low end

$500

per year

High end

$5,000+

per year

Notes

Simple (1–3 exchanges, <500 transactions): $500–$1,200. Complex (DeFi, NFTs, multi-chain, 5K+ tx): $2,500–$10,000+.

Compare

Crypto Tax CPA vs Generalist CPA

FactorCrypto Tax CPAGeneralist CPA
DeFi handlingRoutineOften refused
SoftwareCoinTracker, Koinly, ZenLedgerManual spreadsheet
Cost basis reconstructionYes, from on-chain dataGenerally no
IRS letter responseStandard engagementLimited experience
Time per returnScales with transaction countOften blocks intake above ~500 tx

Questions to ask

  1. What crypto tax software do you work in (CoinTracker, Koinly, ZenLedger, TokenTax)?
  2. Can you handle DeFi liquidity pools, lending, and yield farming?
  3. How do you treat staking rewards — at receipt or at sale?
  4. Do you have experience with IRS crypto warning letters?
  5. Can you reconstruct missing cost basis from on-chain data?
  6. How do you handle wash-sale-adjacent strategies before any rules change?

Red flags

  • Tells you crypto isn't taxable until you cash out to USD
  • Doesn't know what a Form 1099-DA is (effective 2025 reporting)
  • Treats every transaction as ordinary income
  • Can't explain cost basis tracking across wallets
  • Won't sign Form 8275 disclosure when warranted

Documents to prepare

  • CSV exports from every exchange you've used
  • Wallet addresses for on-chain reconciliation
  • Any 1099-B, 1099-MISC, or 1099-NEC from exchanges
  • Prior crypto tax reports or capital gains summaries
  • Records of any crypto received as payment or as a gift

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FAQ

Crypto Tax Accountants in Boston — common questions

How much does crypto tax accountants cost in Boston?+

Boston crypto tax accountants typically charge $500–$5,000+ per year. Simple (1–3 exchanges, <500 transactions): $500–$1,200. Complex (DeFi, NFTs, multi-chain, 5K+ tx): $2,500–$10,000+.

Do I need a Massachusetts-licensed CPA to work with a crypto tax accountants in Boston?+

For Massachusetts state filings, your preparer should hold a CPA license from the Massachusetts Board of Accountancy or be an Enrolled Agent. Out-of-state pros can prepare your federal return but should not sign as a CPA on Massachusetts returns. Massachusetts has a 5% flat personal income tax plus a 4% surtax on income above $1M (the 'Millionaires Tax'), and an 8% corporate excise tax.

Do I owe tax if I only swapped one crypto for another?+

Yes. Crypto-to-crypto swaps are taxable dispositions under U.S. tax law — you realize a gain or loss on the disposed asset measured against fair market value at the time of the swap.

How are staking and mining rewards taxed?+

As ordinary income at fair market value when received (constructive receipt). When you later sell, any change in value is capital gain or loss.

Are NFT transactions taxable?+

Yes. Minting, buying, and selling NFTs are all taxable events. NFTs treated as collectibles may face a 28% long-term capital gains rate instead of 20%.

Do wash-sale rules apply to crypto?+

Currently no — wash-sale rules under §1091 only apply to securities, and crypto is treated as property. Legislation has been proposed to extend wash-sale rules to digital assets; rules may change.

What is Form 1099-DA?+

A new IRS form requiring brokers to report digital asset transactions, with phased effective dates starting 2025. Expect every major exchange to issue 1099-DA covering gross proceeds, then cost basis.