Puntos claves de la noticia:
- Coinbase executives refute allegations they lobbied against a bitcoin tax exemption.
- Stablecoins are the sole beneficiaries of the exemption in the CLARITY Act.
- Bitcoin’s price volatility turns every transaction into a potential taxable event.
Coinbase executives moved quickly to refute allegations that circulated on social media over recent days. Several Bitcoin advocates claimed the exchange pressured US lawmakers to exclude Bitcoin from a de minimis tax exemption — arguing the asset does not function as a widespread medium of exchange. The implied goal, according to the accusation, was to redirect that tax benefit exclusively toward stablecoins.
Brian Armstrong responded without hesitation. He called the allegations “totally false” and described them as misinformation. In public statements, Armstrong said he had devoted considerable time to actively lobbying for a bitcoin tax exemption and committed to continuing those efforts. Paul Grewal, the company’s chief legal officer, and Faryar Shirzad, its chief policy officer, reinforced the position with statements in the same direction: Coinbase has never lobbied against Bitcoin. The company declined to expand its comments to media outlets beyond what its executives already stated publicly.
Not sure where you're getting this misinformation (perhaps you can share?) but it's totally false.
I've spent a bunch of time lobbying for Bitcoin's de minimis tax exemption, and will continue doing so. It's obviously the right thing.
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) March 12, 2026
The underlying debate, however, reveals a genuine tension inside the legislative process in Washington. In July 2025, Senator Cynthia Lummis introduced a bill proposing a de minimis tax exemption for crypto transactions of up to $300, with an annual cap of $5,000. The bill failed to gain traction. And according to the Bitcoin Policy Institute, the current draft of the CLARITY Act does not include any such exemption for bitcoin.
Stablecoins Would Receive the Benefit Bitcoin Advocates Claim Should Apply to BTC
The current state of the legislative discussion positions US dollar-pegged stablecoins as the sole beneficiaries of the tax exemption contemplated in the CLARITY Act draft, according to Conner Brown, managing director of the Bitcoin Policy Institute. The regulatory logic behind the distinction rests on the fact that stablecoins maintain a fixed value relative to the dollar and generate no capital gains or losses when used as a payment instrument. Bitcoin, by contrast, fluctuates in price, turning every transaction into a potential taxable event.

Therein lies the core problem for those promoting Bitcoin as an electronic payment system. Every sale or transfer of the asset triggers a tax obligation that discourages everyday use. Without a de minimis exemption freeing small transactions from the reporting burden, bitcoin operates at a structural disadvantage against any conventional payment instrument.
The Blockchain Association, a Washington-based crypto advocacy group, submitted its own tax proposal to lawmakers in February. The plan calls for exemptions on “low-dollar” digital asset transactions, though without specifying a concrete threshold.
The proposal argues that a well-designed de minimis exemption would eliminate a disproportionate reporting burden for individual taxpayers. The consensus among industry advocates is clear — but translating it into enacted legislation remains the obstacle no bill has managed to clear.
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