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桜木花道

Posted on • Originally published at latinamericacryptoguide.com

Crypto Taxes Across Latin America 2026: Argentina, Colombia, Mexico, Brazil Compared

Tax treatment of crypto varies significantly across Latin America. Here's a practical comparison for 2026 — what's taxable, what rates apply, and what records you need.

Quick Summary Table

Country Tax Authority Rate on Gains Taxable Events
Argentina AFIP 15% (non-residents) / progressive for residents Sale, trade, use
Colombia DIAN 10-35% Sale, trade, use
Venezuela SENIAT Progressive 6-34% Sale, trade, use
Mexico SAT 1.92-35% Sale, trade, use
Brazil Receita Federal 15-22.5% Sale, trade, use
Peru SUNAT 6.25% (capital) / up to 29.5% (business) Sale, trade, use
Chile SII ~13.5% (capital) / up to 27% (business) Sale, trade, use

Key Principles That Apply Everywhere

  1. Holding is not taxable — In all 7 countries, simply owning crypto does not trigger tax. Only when you sell, trade, or spend does it become taxable.

  2. Crypto-to-crypto is taxable — Trading BTC for ETH is treated as selling BTC in virtually every LATAM country. This surprises many users.

  3. Staking and mining rewards are income — Usually taxed when received at the value at time of receipt.

  4. Record everything in local currency — Your cost basis must be recorded in local currency (ARS, COP, MXN, etc.) at the exchange rate on the date of purchase.

The Most Crypto-Favorable Jurisdictions

Chile stands out for having a relatively clear and moderate tax rate (~13.5% for capital gains). The SII has published specific guidance making compliance straightforward.

Peru has a low 6.25% rate for individuals who treat crypto as capital (vs. business income). The threshold for mandatory reporting is also relatively high.

The Most Complex Situations

Argentina has the most complex situation — with official vs. blue dollar exchange rate gaps, AFIP requires careful documentation of which exchange rate was used for cost basis calculations.

Venezuela is complex due to SUNACRIP regulation layered on top of SENIAT tax rules, plus hyperinflation making cost basis calculations challenging.

Practical Record-Keeping System

Regardless of country, here's a simple system:

  1. Monthly export: Download transaction history from all exchanges (CSV format) every month
  2. Exchange rate note: Record the central bank exchange rate for each transaction date
  3. Folder system: One folder per year, one CSV per exchange
  4. Tax calculator: Koinly, CoinTracker, or TaxBit support most LATAM countries

When to Consult a Professional

  • Annual gains over $10,000 USD equivalent
  • Mining or staking income over $1,000 USD
  • DeFi activity (more complex treatment)
  • Using crypto for business transactions
  • Holding crypto across multiple countries

For country-specific tax guides with detailed examples and filing instructions, see the complete crypto tax guide for Latin America.

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