Colombia Advances Crypto Tax Rules As Global Reporting Standards... (2026)
New rules from Colombia’s tax authority require crypto service providers to collect and share user and transaction data.
Colombia’s tax authority, DIAN, has introduced a mandatory reporting regime for crypto service providers, requiring exchanges and intermediaries to collect and submit user and transaction data as part of its oversight of the digital asset sector.
The rules were set out in Resolution 000240, issued on Dec. 24, which adds a crypto reporting regime aligned with OECD-developed international standards, including the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF).
According to the new rules, crypto exchanges, custodians and other service providers must report identifying information and transaction data for “reportable” users, enabling the automatic exchange of that information with foreign tax authorities.
The resolution also sets out due diligence and valuation requirements, including fair-market valuation methods, and establishes penalties for providers that fail to comply.
The reporting obligations are directed at service providers and do not directly impose reporting duties on individual users.
The resolution takes effect upon publication, requiring affected platforms to update their compliance and reporting systems before the first reporting cycles.
Related: Brazilians may soon need to stump up taxes on crypto held abroad
As crypto moves further into the financial mainstream, governments worldwide are tightening tax rules to close reporting gaps and strengthen oversight of digital asset activity.
One major change is the rollout of CARF, an OECD-backed global standard that requires crypto service providers to collect and automatically report user and transaction data to tax authorities, with initial reporting expected in 2026 and the first automatic exchanges of information anticipated in 2027.
Source: CoinTelegraph