The Legislative Move
On October 9, 2019, the Internal Revenue Service issued Revenue Ruling 2019-24, marking the agency’s first substantive update to cryptocurrency tax guidance since Notice 2014-21 established that virtual currency is treated as property for federal income tax purposes. The ruling, which quickly became the dominant regulatory story across crypto markets by mid-October, addressed two questions that had lingered for half a decade: how hard forks and airdrops are taxed, and when taxpayers must report them.
The timing was significant. Bitcoin traded at approximately $8,205 on October 15, 2019 — a staggering increase from the $573 price point when the original 2014 notice was published. The total cryptocurrency market capitalization had ballooned from roughly $8.28 billion to over $225 billion in that five-year span, and the IRS recognized that its earlier framework no longer sufficed for an asset class of this magnitude.
Simultaneously, FinCEN, the SEC, and the CFTC released a joint statement in October 2019 reminding market participants that digital asset activities trigger obligations under the Bank Secrecy Act. The coordinated messaging from four federal agencies represented an unmistakable signal: the era of regulatory ambiguity for cryptocurrencies was ending.
Jurisdiction Context
The IRS guidance arrived amid a broader enforcement escalation. In November 2017, the IRS had obtained a federal court order compelling Coinbase to identify approximately 14,000 customers who traded $20,000 or more in virtual currencies. By 2018, the agency launched its Virtual Currency Compliance campaign, and by October 2019, the IRS Criminal Investigation Division was publicly signaling that multiple criminal cases involving cryptocurrency would soon become visible.
Certain taxpayers who held or had previously held virtual currencies began receiving what the IRS termed “educational” letters regarding reporting requirements. Tax professionals warned that these letters, while framed as informational, carried implicit enforcement undertones. Taxpayers who failed to properly report crypto transactions faced liability for taxes, penalties, interest, and potentially criminal prosecution.
Perhaps the most concrete sign of the IRS’s intent appeared in the draft 2019 Form 1040, Schedule 1, where a new question appeared prominently: “At any time during 2019, did you receive, sell, send, exchange or otherwise acquire any financial interest in any virtual currency?” The placement on Schedule 1 — reserved for income types not included on the main Form 1040 — meant the question would reach a broad swathe of taxpayers, not just those with complex filing situations.
Industry Reaction
The Revenue Ruling tackled hard forks directly. It established that when a hard fork occurs and a taxpayer receives new cryptocurrency units, the taxpayer has gross income equal to the fair market value of the new units at the time of receipt — but only if the taxpayer actually exercises dominion and control over the new currency. If a hard fork produces no new units that the taxpayer can access, no income is recognized. This distinction between receipt and non-receipt of forked tokens provided long-sought clarity for Bitcoin Cash, Bitcoin SV, and the growing list of forked assets.
The accompanying Q&A guidance expanded on practical matters: how to determine fair market value, which exchange rate to use for conversions, and how to handle transactions denominated in virtual currency. Trade organizations and practitioners had submitted comments requesting such guidance for years, and the October 2019 release was broadly welcomed despite some lingering questions about implementation details.
The FinCEN-SEC-CFTC joint statement reinforced that entities engaged in money services involving digital assets must comply with anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism obligations under the Bank Secrecy Act, regardless of how the assets are classified. This effectively told the industry that the securities-versus-commodity-versus-currency debate did not exempt anyone from AML requirements.
Compliance Hurdles
For individual taxpayers, the new guidance created immediate compliance challenges. Anyone who received Bitcoin Cash during the 2017 fork, Bitcoin SV during the 2018 split, or any other airdropped tokens now had clear instructions to report those events as taxable income. The problem was retrospective: many taxpayers had failed to report fork-related income in prior years, and the IRS now had a defined position from which to pursue enforcement.
For exchanges and custodians, the joint agency statement meant that compliance programs needed to meet the same standards as traditional financial institutions. Know-your-customer procedures, suspicious activity reporting, and currency transaction reporting obligations applied fully to digital asset businesses. Smaller platforms that had operated under regulatory uncertainty found themselves needing to rapidly upgrade compliance infrastructure or risk enforcement action.
Tax professionals flagged the Form 1040 Schedule 1 question as particularly consequential. By requiring an affirmative or negative response directly on the tax return, the IRS created a paper trail that could be used in audits and potential criminal cases. A false answer carried its own penalties beyond any unreported crypto income.
What’s Next
The October 2019 regulatory blitz set the stage for a new phase of crypto compliance in the United States. With the IRS having established its position on forks and airdrops, attention turned to more complex questions: decentralized finance protocols, cross-chain transactions, and the tax treatment of liquidity mining rewards that would explode in popularity during 2020.
The inter-agency coordination between FinCEN, SEC, and CFTC signaled that future regulatory action would likely be unified rather than fragmented across jurisdictions. For an industry that had long exploited regulatory gaps between agencies, this coordination represented a fundamental shift in the enforcement landscape. Bitcoin’s price holding steady above $8,000 despite the regulatory pressure suggested that markets viewed clarity as ultimately positive — but the real impact would unfold over the months and years ahead as enforcement cases materialized.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Consult a qualified professional for guidance specific to your situation.
five years between IRS crypto guidance updates is insane. from 2014 to 2019 the market went from $8b to $225b and they said nothing
five years of silence while the market 28xd. the IRS basically ignored crypto until the tax gap got too big to pretend didnt exist
revenue ruling 2019-24 finally clarifying fork taxation was huge for us cpa folks. before that we were basically guessing how to handle bcash and bsv airdrops
fincen sec and cftc doing a joint statement on crypto aml was the real story here. coordinated enforcement was a new level of seriousness
that joint finCEN SEC CFTC statement was the moment crypto regulation went from scattered enforcement to coordinated framework. 2019 was the turning point