Uphold 1099-DA Tax Form: How to Read It and Avoid Crypto Tax Mistakes

Uphold will issue Form 1099-DA for crypto sales and exchanges, Form 1099-MISC for staking or airdrop rewards over $600, and a separate USD Interest Account 1099 for interest earned - all available through the app's Document Center, with HIFO cost basis method applied automatically.
What Is Uphold Tax Form 1099-DA?
Form 1099-DA is the IRS's new standard for reporting cryptocurrency dispositions starting with the 2025 tax year.
Beginning with 2025 transactions, crypto platforms like Uphold must report sales and exchanges to the IRS using Form 1099-DA. Uphold provides Form 1099-DA along with other tax documents to help you report your digital asset transactions accurately.
Multiple Tax Forms from Uphold
Depending on your activity, you may receive different forms from Uphold.
Form Type | What It Reports | Threshold |
Form 1099-DA | Crypto sales, exchanges, dispositions | No minimum (except stablecoins >$10k) |
Form 1099-MISC | Staking or airdrop rewards | $600+ |
USD Interest Account 1099 | Interest earned on USD holdings | $10+ |
Each form serves a distinct purpose and reports different types of activity to the IRS.
How to Access Your Uphold Tax Documents
Uphold makes retrieving tax forms straightforward through the app.
Mobile app:
Tap Account Center in the top-left corner
Go to Documents section
Select the report you need
Follow on-screen instructions to download
Desktop web:
Click the More (...) icon on the left sidebar
Go to Documents
Select your tax form
Download directly or email to yourself
All 2025 tax forms are available within the Uphold app by mid-February 2026.
What Triggers Each Form Type
Different activities on Uphold generate different tax documents.
1099-DA triggers:
Selling crypto for fiat (e.g., BTC to USD)
Trading one crypto for another (e.g., ETH to SOL)
Using crypto to purchase goods or services
Disposing of digital assets including stablecoins
1099-MISC triggers:
Staking rewards totaling $600 or more
Airdrop rewards totaling $600 or more
USD Interest Account 1099 triggers:
Interest earned on USD holdings of $10 or more
No tax forms generated:
Buying and holding crypto (HODLing)
Transferring assets between wallets you own
The $10,000 Stablecoin Reporting Exception
Uphold applies special rules for stablecoin transactions.
Under 2025 IRS rules, sales or exchanges of qualifying stablecoins are only reported to the IRS if your total annual gross proceeds exceed $10,000.
What this means: If you traded less than $10,000 in stablecoins during 2025, those transactions won't appear on your 1099-DA sent to the IRS.
Important: You're still legally required to report these stablecoin transactions on your tax return even if they're below the $10,000 threshold and not on your 1099-DA.
Uphold's HIFO Cost Basis Method
Understanding how Uphold calculates your cost basis helps prevent surprises.
Uphold uses the HIFO (Highest-In, First-Out) method for U.S. tax reporting.
How it works: When you sell crypto, Uphold assumes you sold the assets with the highest purchase price first. This generally helps minimize realized capital gains.
Why it matters: Different exchanges use different methods (FIFO, LIFO, HIFO). If you transferred crypto from Coinbase (which might use FIFO) to Uphold, your cost basis calculations could differ depending on which platform you use for tax reporting.
Consistency requirement: You must use the same cost basis method consistently for each specific wallet or account.
Common Uphold Tax Scenarios
Understanding these situations helps you prepare correctly.
Crypto purchased and sold on Uphold - You bought Ethereum on Uphold and sold it later. Uphold reports proceeds and applies HIFO to calculate cost basis for your customer copy (though the IRS receives proceeds only for 2025).
Staking rewards on Uphold - You earned $800 in staking rewards. This appears on Form 1099-MISC as ordinary income taxed when received. The $800 becomes your cost basis for when you later sell those tokens.
USD Interest Account - You earned $45 in interest on your USD balance. This appears on the USD Interest Account 1099 tax form and is taxed as ordinary income, even though it's below typical 1099-INT thresholds.
Crypto transferred to Uphold - You moved Bitcoin from Kraken to Uphold, then sold it. Uphold uses HIFO based only on visible transactions. If your original Kraken purchase isn't visible to Uphold, you must provide that information or track it separately.
Understanding Your Uphold Tax Form 1099-DA
Uphold's 1099-DA follows the standard IRS format for digital asset reporting.
The form includes:
Your personal information and Uphold's details
DTIF code and name of each digital asset sold
Number of units sold
Date sold or disposed
Gross proceeds (USD value)
For 2025: Proceeds reported to IRS (cost basis not required)
Important: Uphold's customer copy may show gains/losses calculated using HIFO, but the IRS receives only proceeds for 2025 transactions.
Tax Rates for Uphold Crypto Transactions
How you're taxed depends on transaction type and holding period.
Transaction Type | Holding Period | Tax Treatment |
Crypto sales/trades | ≤ 1 year | Short-term capital gains (10-37%) |
Crypto sales/trades | > 1 year | Long-term capital gains (0%, 15%, 20%) |
Staking/airdrop rewards | N/A | Ordinary income (10-37%) |
USD interest | N/A | Ordinary income (10-37%) |
The IRS distinguishes between short-term and long-term gains based on holding period—over one year qualifies for preferential long-term rates.
What's Taxable vs. Non-Taxable on Uphold
Not every crypto activity triggers a tax event.
Taxable events:
Selling crypto for USD or other fiat
Trading one crypto for another (both sides taxable)
Using crypto to purchase goods or services
Receiving staking or airdrop rewards
Earning interest on USD balance
Non-taxable events:
Buying crypto with USD
Transferring crypto between your own wallets
Simply holding crypto (HODLing)
Required IRS Forms for Filing
Your Uphold tax forms are starting points - you still need to file specific IRS forms.
Even with Form 1099-DA and 1099-MISC from Uphold, you must complete:
Form 8949 - Lists each crypto sale with proceeds, cost basis, and gain/loss.
Schedule D - Summarizes your capital gains and losses from Form 8949.
Schedule 1 - Reports Form 1099-MISC income (staking/airdrops) and USD Interest Account income.
Multiple platforms? If you used Uphold plus other exchanges, you must report ALL transactions across all platforms.
W-9 Requirement for Tax Forms
You must submit a valid W-9 to receive tax forms from Uphold.
To receive 1099 forms from Uphold, both conditions must apply:
You're classified as a U.S. person (citizen or resident)
You've submitted a valid W-9 to Uphold
Without a valid W-9: You won't receive tax forms from Uphold, but you're still legally required to report all taxable activity using your transaction records.
Where to submit: Check your Uphold account settings for tax certification requirements.
Calculating Cost Basis for Your Crypto
Understanding your cost basis is critical for accurate reporting.
For crypto purchased on Uphold:
Uphold applies HIFO method automatically
Check your transaction history for original purchase prices
Include all acquisition fees
Document holding period for each sale
For crypto transferred to Uphold:
Locate records from the original exchange or wallet
Find the date and price you first acquired the crypto
Determine which cost basis method you're using
Maintain documentation proving your basis
HIFO method note: If Uphold doesn't have your complete purchase history (for transferred crypto), the HIFO calculation may be incomplete.
Using Crypto Tax Software
Professional software handles Uphold's HIFO method and multi-platform complexity.
Awaken Tax integrates with Uphold and can:
Import your crypto transaction history automatically
Handle HIFO, FIFO, or other cost basis methods
Track transferred crypto from other platforms
Reconcile your 1099-DA and 1099-MISC
Generate Form 8949 and Schedule D automatically
Ensure accurate reporting across all your crypto activity
This is especially valuable if you use Uphold plus other exchanges like Coinbase, Kraken, or Binance, each potentially using different cost basis methods.
What Happens If You Don't Report
The IRS receives copies of all your Uphold 1099 forms.
Immediate risks:
CP2000 notice for unreported proceeds or discrepancies
20% accuracy penalties on underpayment
Interest charges from the filing deadline
Serious consequences:
Increased audit likelihood
Penalties up to 25% of unpaid tax
Criminal prosecution for intentional evasion
The IRS's automated matching systems flag any mismatch between what Uphold reports and what appears on your return.
Common Uphold Tax Mistakes
Avoid these errors to stay compliant.
Ignoring small USD interest amounts - Even if you earned less than $10 in USD interest (and didn't receive the USD Interest Account 1099), you must report it as ordinary income.
Forgetting stablecoin trades under $10k - Just because they're not on your 1099-DA doesn't mean they're not taxable. You must still report all stablecoin transactions.
Not tracking transferred crypto basis - If you moved crypto to Uphold from elsewhere, you need original purchase records. Uphold's HIFO calculation only works with visible transaction history.
Assuming HIFO matches other exchanges - If you also use Coinbase (FIFO) or other platforms, you can't mix methods. Each wallet/account requires consistent method application.
Missing staking/airdrop income - These are taxed as ordinary income when received, not just when sold. Both the initial receipt AND eventual sale are taxable events.
Tax Planning with Uphold
Simple strategies can reduce your crypto tax bill legally.
Understand HIFO advantages - Uphold's HIFO method automatically sells your highest-cost crypto first, minimizing gains. This can save substantial taxes compared to FIFO.
Hold for long-term rates - Wait more than a year before selling to access 0%, 15%, or 20% rates instead of up to 37%.
Harvest tax losses - Sell losing positions before year-end. Crypto losses offset crypto gains. (Crypto currently isn't subject to wash sale rules, but this could change.)
Track USD interest separately - Interest is ordinary income with no capital gains preference. Consider the tax impact when deciding between interest-earning USD accounts and holding crypto.
Document all transfers - When moving crypto to/from Uphold, record the date, amount, and original cost basis to maintain accurate tax records.
Getting Professional Help
Know when DIY works and when to hire expertise.
DIY makes sense if:
All crypto purchased and sold on Uphold only
No external wallet transfers
Simple buy-and-hold strategy
Fewer than 50 transactions total
Comfortable with HIFO method and tax software
Hire a professional if:
Transferred crypto from multiple sources
Missing cost basis records
High-volume trading across multiple platforms
Received IRS notices
Staking/DeFi income complicates your situation
High-value portfolio
Used different cost basis methods on different platforms
Look for tax professionals with cryptocurrency specialization and Form 1099-DA experience.
Uphold Tax Form 1099-DA Key Takeaways
Remember these essential points about Uphold crypto taxes.
Multiple form types - You may receive 1099-DA, 1099-MISC, and USD Interest Account 1099 depending on your activity.
HIFO cost basis - Uphold automatically applies Highest-In, First-Out method for U.S. tax reporting, which generally minimizes gains.
Stablecoin exception - Stablecoin sales under $10,000 aren't reported to IRS on 1099-DA, but you must still report them on your return.
W-9 required - You must submit a valid W-9 to receive tax forms, though you're required to report taxable activity regardless.
Report all activity - Even amounts below thresholds (small USD interest, sub-$10k stablecoins) must be reported on your tax return.
Uphold Tax Form 1099-DA Frequently Asked Questions
Does Uphold send my tax forms to the IRS automatically? Yes, Uphold files Form 1099-DA, 1099-MISC, and USD Interest Account 1099 with the IRS for qualifying accounts, so they already have your transaction information before you file.
Why does Uphold use HIFO instead of FIFO for cost basis? Uphold uses HIFO (Highest-In, First-Out) because it generally minimizes realized capital gains by assuming you sold your most expensive crypto first - this typically results in lower taxes for users.
Do I need to report stablecoin trades under $10,000? Yes, you must report ALL crypto transactions on your tax return, even though stablecoin sales under $10,000 aren't reported to the IRS on your 1099-DA.
Do I need to report crypto if I only bought and held it on Uphold? No, buying and holding isn't taxable, but you must report all crypto sales, staking rewards, airdrops, and USD interest even if you don't receive forms.
What if I transferred crypto to Uphold from another exchange? You'll need to maintain your own records from the original exchange showing purchase date and price - Uphold's HIFO calculation only works with transactions visible on the platform.
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