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Short vs long-term crypto gains explained

By Editorial team · 2026-06-14

In short: Short-term gains are profits on crypto held for a short period; long-term gains are profits on crypto held longer. In the US the dividing line is 12 months — short-term gains are taxed at ordinary income rates (up to 37%) while long-term gains get preferential 0/15/20% rates. Australia uses a similar 12-month line for its 50% CGT discount. The UK and Canada don't split this way. This is general information, not tax advice.

Short-term capital gains are profits on assets held for a short time; long-term gains are profits on assets held longer — and long-term gains are usually taxed at lower rates. In the United States and Australia, the dividing line is a 12-month holding period. Crossing it can dramatically cut your tax: in the US, long-term gains enjoy 0/15/20% rates instead of ordinary income rates up to 37%, and in Australia a 50% discount halves the taxable gain. The UK and Canada do not split gains this way. Estimate the impact for your country with the crypto capital-gains tax estimator. This is educational information, not tax advice.

The 12-month rule

In both the US and Australia, the test is simple: how long did you hold the asset before disposing of it?

The clock starts the day after you acquire the asset and runs to the day you dispose of it. Crucially, moving coins between your own wallets doesn’t reset it — only acquisition starts the clock and only disposal stops it.

United States: ordinary vs preferential rates

This is where the holding period matters most. Short-term gains are simply added to your income and taxed at your ordinary rate (10%–37% in 2026). Long-term gains get their own preferential brackets:

2026 long-term rate (single filer)Taxable income
0%Up to ~$49,450
15%~$49,450 to ~$545,500
20%Over ~$545,500

So a high earner who flips crypto inside a year could pay 37%, but the same gain held past 12 months might be taxed at 15% or even 20% — versus potentially 0% for a low-income holder. That’s a large, entirely legal saving for patience. High earners may additionally owe the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax.

Australia: the 50% CGT discount

Australia doesn’t have separate rate tables; instead, a resident individual who holds a crypto asset for more than 12 months gets the 50% CGT discount — only half the gain is added to income and taxed at the marginal rate (0%–45% plus Medicare levy). Held 12 months or less, the whole gain is taxed. From 1 July 2027 this discount is scheduled to change, but for 2026 it stands.

The UK and Canada: no holding-period split

Neither the UK nor Canada distinguishes short-term from long-term:

So “hold for a year to save tax” is US and Australia advice only — it does nothing in the UK or Canada. See how crypto capital gains tax works for the full picture.

A worked comparison (US)

Say you have a $10,000 gain and $90,000 of other income:

ScenarioRate appliedApprox. tax
Sold at 11 months (short-term)24% ordinary~$2,400
Sold at 13 months (long-term)15% preferential~$1,500

Two extra months of holding saves around $900 on the same gain. Run your own numbers in the tax estimator, which applies the 12-month test automatically.

Why the preferential rate exists

Governments tax long-term gains more lightly to encourage patient, productive investment rather than speculative churn. The policy logic is that capital committed for a year or more is “real” investment, while rapid in-and-out trading looks more like ordinary income-earning activity — so it’s taxed like income. Whether or not you agree with the rationale, the practical upshot is a built-in incentive to hold. For crypto, where holding through volatility is psychologically hard, the tax code effectively pays you to be disciplined. That said, the incentive only exists in jurisdictions that draw the line — which is why a US or Australian holder thinks in “lots and dates” while a UK or Canadian holder thinks only in “total gain this year.”

How DCA interacts with the holding period

If you dollar-cost average, you accumulate many small lots, each with its own acquisition date. When you sell, the lots you’ve held longest are the ones most likely to qualify for long-term or discounted treatment. In the US, choosing which lots to sell — specific identification — lets you deliberately realise long-term lots first to lock in the lower rate, while keeping recent lots until they age past 12 months. Tracking each lot’s date is therefore not just bookkeeping; it’s a lever you can pull to lower your tax. Our average cost & cost-basis calculator helps you see the lots you hold, and how to calculate cost basis explains the methods.

Practical implications

Understanding the short vs long-term distinction is one of the highest-value pieces of crypto tax knowledge in the US and Australia. Track your holding periods, use specific identification where allowed to sell your longest-held lots, and confirm specifics with a professional — these are estimates, not advice.

Frequently asked questions

What is the holding period for long-term crypto gains?

In the US and Australia it is more than 12 months. Hold an asset for at least a year and a day before selling to qualify for long-term (US) or discounted (Australia) treatment. The UK and Canada do not use a holding-period split.

How much can holding longer save me?

In the US, the gap between a 37% short-term rate and a 20% long-term rate is 17 percentage points; for many investors it is the difference between 22–24% and 15%. In Australia the 50% discount halves the taxable gain.

Does the holding period reset if I move coins between wallets?

No. Transferring between your own wallets is not a disposal and does not reset the holding period. Only acquiring the asset starts the clock.

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Last updated: 2026-06-14