Crypto Law Profile

DAC8 Crypto-Asset Tax Reporting Directive

DAC8 expands EU tax administrative cooperation to crypto-assets, requiring reporting crypto-asset service providers to collect and report transaction data for automatic exchange among Member States.

European Union In force Directive Jan 1, 2026

At a glance

Status In force in the EU; main DAC8 crypto reporting application began Jan. 1, 2026.
Who Reports Reporting crypto-asset service providers and certain operators that effectuate reportable transactions.
Data Covered User identity, tax residence, TINs and aggregate transaction data by reportable crypto-asset.
First Exchange First 2026 reporting-year exchanges are due within nine months after year-end.

Overview

DAC8, formally Council Directive (EU) 2023/2226, is the European Union directive that amends Directive 2011/16/EU on administrative cooperation in taxation to add crypto-asset tax reporting and automatic exchange of information. The Council adopted the Directive on Oct. 17, 2023, it was published in the Official Journal on Oct. 24, 2023, and the main crypto-asset reporting application date is Jan. 1, 2026.

DAC8 crypto-asset reporting scope

DAC8 is designed to give EU tax authorities a standardized channel for receiving and exchanging information on reportable crypto-asset users and transactions. The European Commission describes DAC8 as the eighth amendment to the Directive on Administrative Cooperation and states that it expands automatic exchange of information to crypto-assets between EU countries.

The regime applies through Member State implementing measures. It requires national tax authorities to obtain information from Reporting Crypto-Asset Service Providers, or RCASPs, and exchange relevant information with the Member State of residence of the taxpayer or investor on an annual basis. The Directive’s recitals frame the measure as a response to the cross-border and decentralized features of crypto-assets, which can make income and gains harder for tax administrations to assess.

Key provisions for reporting crypto-asset service providers

  • Reporting and due diligence: Member States must require RCASPs to fulfil Annex VI reporting requirements and carry out due diligence procedures for reportable users.
  • User information: Reported data can include names, addresses, Member State tax residence, tax identification numbers, dates of birth for individuals, and controlling-person information for certain entities.
  • Transaction information: RCASPs report aggregate amounts, units and transaction counts for acquisitions, disposals, crypto-to-crypto exchanges, reportable retail payment transactions and transfers.
  • Single registration: Certain crypto-asset operators that are not MiCA-authorized crypto-asset service providers must register in a single Member State for DAC8 reporting purposes.

Assets and transactions in scope

DAC8 builds on MiCA terminology and the OECD Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework. Its broad scope includes crypto-assets used for payment or investment purposes, with reportable information divided by type of reportable crypto-asset. Commission guidance states that the scope includes decentralized crypto-assets, stablecoins including e-money tokens, and certain non-fungible tokens, subject to the Directive’s detailed definitions and exclusions.

Status, effective date and timeline

EUR-Lex lists Directive (EU) 2023/2226 as in force. The Directive entered into force on the twentieth day after Official Journal publication, while Member States were required to transpose the main provisions by Dec. 31, 2025 and apply them from Jan. 1, 2026. The first information is reported for the relevant calendar year or other reporting period beginning Jan. 1, 2026. The Commission states that exchanges for the first reporting year, 2026, are due by Sept. 30, 2027.

DAC8 also includes later phase-ins for certain tax-identification-number reporting and communication provisions, with application dates in 2028 and 2030. A 2025 implementing regulation added standard computerized formats and Crypto-Asset Operator register forms for DAC8 exchanges, applying from Jan. 1, 2026.

Relationship to MiCA, CARF and EU tax cooperation

DAC8 is not a trading, licensing or prudential market framework. It is a tax transparency directive that sits beside MiCA and the EU transfer-of-funds framework. It relies on MiCA definitions for crypto-asset service providers and crypto-assets while aligning the EU reporting system with the OECD CARF and changes to the Common Reporting Standard.

The Directive does not itself set crypto tax rates or decide whether a particular transaction produces taxable income, gain or loss. Those questions remain matters of national law, using information collected and exchanged under the DAC framework.

Editorial classification

For CryptoSlate’s law database, DAC8 should be classified as an EU Directive focused on Taxation & Reporting, with secondary relevance to Licensing & Registration, Privacy & Cybersecurity, and the broader crypto regulatory perimeter. The profile should be reviewed as Member States publish or update national transposition rules and reporting formats.

Key provisions

Mandatory Crypto-Asset Reporting

Member States must require RCASPs to report and conduct due diligence under Annex VI for reportable crypto-asset users and transactions.

Taxation & Reporting Jan 1, 2026 Source

Automatic Exchange Among Tax Authorities

Competent authorities exchange reported information with the Member State of residence within nine months after the reporting year.

Taxation & Reporting Jan 1, 2026 Source

Broad Crypto-Asset Reporting Scope

DAC8 builds on MiCA and CARF concepts and covers reportable crypto-assets and users through detailed Annex VI definitions and exclusions.

Regulatory Perimeter Jan 1, 2026 Source

Due Diligence and Self-Certification

RCASPs must identify reportable users and obtain tax-residence self-certifications; pre-existing user review benchmarks fall on Jan. 1, 2027.

Privacy & Cybersecurity Jan 1, 2026 Source

Single Registration for Certain Operators

Crypto-asset operators that are not MiCA-authorized CASPs register in a single Member State for EU DAC8 reporting identification.

Licensing & Registration Jan 1, 2026 Source

Standard Computerised Reporting Format

Implementing Regulation (EU) 2025/2263 sets standard computerised formats and Crypto-Asset Operator register forms for DAC8 exchanges.

Taxation & Reporting Jan 1, 2026 Source

Timeline

  1. Commission proposal presented

    Commission proposed DAC8 amendments to the DAC framework for crypto-asset reporting and related tax information exchanges.

    Proposed Source
  2. Council agreed position

    Council reached agreement on its position regarding amendments to the Directive.

    Adopted Source
  3. Parliament opinion adopted

    European Parliament adopted its opinion on DAC8 under the consultation procedure.

    Passed Source
  4. Council adopted DAC8

    Council unanimously adopted Directive (EU) 2023/2226 amending Directive 2011/16/EU.

    Adopted Source
  5. Published in Official Journal

    Directive (EU) 2023/2226 was published in the Official Journal as OJ L, 2023/2226.

    Published Source
  6. Directive entered into force

    Directive entered into force on the twentieth day after Official Journal publication.

    In force Source
  7. Main application date

    Member States apply the main DAC8 crypto-asset reporting provisions from Jan. 1, 2026.

    In force Source

Who it affects

Actors

Council of the European Union, EU Member States, European Commission, Reporting Crypto-Asset Service Providers, Tax authorities

Asset classes

Crypto assets, E-money tokens, NFTs, Stablecoins

Official sources

Editorial note

DAC8 is a tax transparency and reporting directive, not a standalone crypto licensing framework. Track national transposition, domestic filing formats and the first exchange cycle for Member State-specific updates.