Starting from January 1, 2026, the OECD-led Crypto Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) officially comes into effect, covering the first batch of 48 countries and regions.



It requires crypto asset service providers to disclose user transaction, exchange, and asset transfer information to tax authorities, and establishes a unified standard for cross-border information exchange. The goal is to fill the gaps in the current tax system in the digital asset field.

The message here is very clear. Regulators are no longer debating whether crypto assets exist but are assuming their long-term presence and are beginning to manage them using traditional financial methods.

In the coming years, as the European Union, the UK, Singapore, Switzerland, and even the United States gradually adopt these measures, integrating crypto assets into mainstream tax systems will become the norm.

CARF is not truly about restricting blockchain technology itself but about dispelling the illusion built on regulatory vacuum. The long-term tax evasion opportunities with crypto assets will diminish, replaced by a clearer and more realistic compliance environment.

For the industry, this means the end of reckless growth and an acceleration of differentiation. For participants, understanding and adapting to the rules is becoming an integral part of the crypto world.

#CARF #OECD #CryptoRegulation
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