TLDR
- House lawmakers introduced six crypto tax bills focused on clarity, parity and administrability.
- The package covers mining, staking, donations, reporting duties and anti-abuse tax rules.
- Patrick Witt backed the effort as Washington advances broader digital asset policy talks.
- The CLARITY Act faces a tighter calendar despite pressure from major crypto firms.
- Investors and developers may gain clearer rules if the tax proposals advance further.
The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee has introduced six digital asset tax bills aimed at clarifying how crypto activity should be treated under federal tax law. The package was framed around clarity, parity and administrability, with lawmakers seeking rules that can be applied more consistently across the digital asset sector.
The bills arrive as Congress continues to weigh broader crypto legislation, including market structure proposals tied to the CLARITY Act. The latest tax package focuses on areas that have long created uncertainty for crypto users, developers, exchanges and tax professionals.
Six Bills Target Core Crypto Tax Questions
The package includes the Charitable Deductions for Digital Asset Donations Act, the Tax Clarity for Mining and Staking Act and the Less Tax Paperwork for Digital Asset Owners Act. It also includes the Providing Analogous Rules for Digital Assets Act, the Digital Assets Voluntary Disclosure Program Act and the Applying Existing Tax Anti-Abuse Rules to Digital Assets Act.
Together, the bills address mining and staking rewards, charitable giving, reporting obligations and tax anti-abuse standards. They are designed to apply familiar tax principles to digital assets while reducing uncertainty for taxpayers and administrators.
The mining and staking bill is expected to draw close attention because reward timing and income recognition remain contested issues. Clearer rules in this area could help taxpayers determine when income is recognized and how related costs are handled.
White House Adviser Backs Tax Clarity Push
White House crypto adviser Patrick Witt welcomed the committee’s announcement and linked the effort to wider digital asset reforms. His response reflected support for pairing market structure rules with clearer tax treatment for crypto activity.
The tax package also follows earlier discussion drafts that examined stablecoin transactions, crypto lending, mining, staking, charitable donations and wash-sale treatment. Those drafts have now moved into introduced legislation, giving lawmakers a more defined framework for debate.
For developers, the proposals could reduce uncertainty around building products tied to staking, mining and other on-chain activities. For investors, the reporting provisions may offer more predictable tax compliance if the measures continue through Congress.
CLARITY Act Faces Calendar Pressure
The tax bills were introduced while the CLARITY Act faces a tightening legislative schedule. Galaxy Digital reportedly reduced its estimate of the bill becoming law in 2026 from 75% to 60%, citing unresolved Senate negotiations and limited time before recess.
More than 200 crypto companies and industry groups have urged lawmakers to advance market structure legislation. Coinbase, Ripple, Kraken, Circle, Andreessen Horowitz, Paradigm, Consensys and Anchorage Digital were among the groups pushing for federal rules covering SEC and CFTC oversight.
The six tax bills still must move through the legislative process before becoming law. Their introduction shows that Congress is treating crypto taxation as a central part of the wider effort to position the United States as a leading digital asset jurisdiction.





