Claims circulating online that Australia plans to scrap its longstanding 50% capital gains tax discount for cryptocurrency investors and replace it with an inflation-based system are not supported by reality.
The Australian Tax Office continues to apply the 50% CGT discount to individuals who hold crypto assets for more than 12 months before selling. That policy has not changed, no official announcement has signaled its removal, and the supposed replacement framework does not appear to exist in any credible form.
What the current rules actually say
If you buy Bitcoin, Ethereum, or any other digital asset and sell it within 12 months, your profit is taxed at your full marginal income tax rate. Those rates range from 0% to 45%, depending on your total taxable income.
Hold that same asset for longer than 12 months, though, and you qualify for the 50% CGT discount. Only half of your capital gain gets added to your taxable income. For someone in the top tax bracket, that effectively caps the tax rate on long-term crypto gains at roughly 22.5%.
There is also a carve-out for personal use. Crypto purchased and used for personal transactions may be exempt from CGT entirely if the original cost was under $10,000. The ATO classifies these as personal use assets, and the exemption applies as long as the crypto was not held as an investment or for business purposes.
Where the confusion likely started
Inflation indexation was actually how Australia handled capital gains before 1999. Under the old system, the cost base of an asset was adjusted for inflation using the Consumer Price Index, and you only paid tax on the “real” gain after accounting for rising prices. The Howard government replaced that approach with the current 50% discount model in 1999.
No recent legislation, budget announcement, or ATO guidance has proposed eliminating the 50% discount for crypto or any other asset class. The ATO has been updating its guidance on digital assets, particularly around decentralized finance and crypto lending, but those updates have reinforced the existing framework rather than dismantled it.
What Australian crypto investors should actually know
Every disposal of a crypto asset, whether selling for Australian dollars, swapping one token for another, or using crypto to purchase goods, is a taxable event. Gains and losses must be reported in annual tax returns.
The ATO has data-matching programs with Australian crypto exchanges and has previously sent warning letters to taxpayers it suspects of underreporting. Tools like CoinLedger and similar portfolio trackers are commonly recommended for keeping accurate records, especially for active traders who might have hundreds of taxable events in a single financial year.
For investors holding assets long-term, the 50% CGT discount remains the single most valuable tax benefit available. Selling a position at 11 months and 29 days versus 12 months and 1 day can literally double your tax bill on the same gain.
cryptobriefing.com