Ahead of a pivotal meeting next week, the United States House Ways and Means Committee has circulated seven draft bills focusing on the taxation of digital assets. Each proposal targets a specific aspect of cryptocurrency taxation. Notably, the suggested regulations aim to lighten the tax burden on small transactions, clarify the taxation of assets obtained through mining and staking, and alleviate certain requirements for charitable donations involving digital assets.
Committee set to review on June 9
The committee, which oversees tax policy, is scheduled to discuss these issues on June 9. The draft bills suggest that lawmakers are seeking to resolve unique challenges with focused legislation rather than a single, broad statute. Proposals include establishing minimum tax exemption thresholds for small crypto transactions, limiting tax liabilities on stablecoin trades and network fees, providing clarity around how mined digital assets are taxed, and aligning the taxation of digital assets more closely with existing securities laws.
The drafts also address applying wash sale rules to cryptocurrencies and removing valuation mandates for charitable donations made with digital assets.
Mini glossary: The wash sale rule limits tax advantages when an asset is sold at a loss and then quickly repurchased. This rule has long applied to securities in the U.S., but its relevance to crypto assets remains a topic of debate.
Chamber of Digital Commerce CEO Cody Carbone noted that the upcoming session presents an opportunity to refine these proposals and advance bipartisan tax reforms.
Mining and staking income in the spotlight
A top concern within the crypto industry’s tax debate is eliminating so-called double taxation on mining and staking income. Under the current framework, some digital asset earnings may be taxed both when they are received and again when sold. One of the drafts specifically aims to resolve this issue, reducing uncertainty for miners and those who participate in staking activities.
Industry lobbying groups have recently emphasized that while regulatory questions around market structure have taken center stage in Washington, the next major policy challenge is taxation. The release of these draft proposals signals that lawmakers are now moving the technical debate over crypto taxes onto the Congressional agenda.
Past efforts had struggled
Previous initiatives have attempted to clarify which crypto transactions should be considered taxable events, but many fell short of delivering solutions. Among these was an effort championed by Republican Senator Cynthia Lummis, who leads the digital assets subcommittee of the Senate Banking Committee and is noted for her regulatory work representing Wyoming.
Carbone shared that his organization intends to work closely with the committee to strengthen the drafts and help secure tax clarity and fairness for digital assets.
Nevertheless, similar ideas promoted by Lummis in the past did not garner enough support, including a push last year to add relevant provisions to a Republican spending bill, which ultimately did not succeed.
Observers point out that these new bipartisan tax initiatives in the House have emerged relatively late in the legislative session. However, there is speculation that the relevant measures could be included in must-pass legislative packages still pending before Congress this year.




