Spain treats cryptocurrencies as taxable assets, meaning capital gains, income-based crypto activity, staking rewards, and even certain international holdings must be reported to the Agencia Tributaria. Recent laws such as Ley 11/2021 (Anti-Fraud Law) significantly expanded crypto-reporting obligations for residents and entities operating in Spain.
According to guidance from the Agencia Tributaria, crypto is considered a digital asset comparable to other forms of property. It is not legal tender and therefore falls under the rules for *capital gains and losses*. This classification means each disposal (sale, trade, crypto-to-crypto exchange, or use of crypto for purchases) is a taxable event.
The Spanish tax system applies existing IRPF (Impuesto sobre la Renta de las Personas Físicas) rules to crypto activity. Additionally, the Anti-Fraud Law (Ley 11/2021) introduced stricter reporting, mandatory declarations for foreign crypto holdings, and obligations for service providers and exchanges to report user data.
Any sale of crypto for euros or other fiat currencies triggers a capital gain or loss. The gain is calculated by subtracting acquisition cost from sale value.
Crypto-to-crypto swaps are *also taxable events*, even when no fiat currency is involved. Gains must be calculated in euros at the time of each trade.
When crypto is used as payment, the transaction counts as a disposal and must be reported with corresponding gains or losses.
Crypto received from mining, staking, airdrops, freelance work, or salary must be declared as general income at its fair market value on the day received.
These transactions fall under savings income (rentas del ahorro) and are taxed using the standard capital gains brackets.
Capital gains from crypto fall under the *savings income* category with the following 2025 rates:
Income is taxed under the general IRPF progressive rates, which can reach up to ~47% depending on the region (comunidad autónoma).
All Spanish tax residents must declare crypto disposals, gains, losses, and income in the annual IRPF return. The Agencia Tributaria provides guidance within Chapter 11 of the IRPF manual on how to report virtual currencies.
A direct result of Ley 11/2021, Modelo 721 requires residents to declare crypto assets held abroad if the total value exceeds €50,000. This includes exchanges headquartered outside Spain.
Crypto capital gains and income must be included in the annual personal income tax return (IRPF – Modelo 100).
If your total wealth exceeds regional thresholds, crypto assets must be included in the calculation of net wealth.
Losses from crypto disposals can be used to offset capital gains from other investments. Up to 25% of remaining negative amounts may offset savings income in the same tax year. Unused losses can be carried forward for four years.
NFTs follow the same rules as other digital assets: selling or exchanging an NFT triggers a capital gain or loss. NFT income (royalties, rewards) is taxable as general income.
Spain treats DeFi activity based on underlying economic reality: rewards → income; disposals → capital gains. Each protocol interacts differently, so proper record-keeping is essential.
The Agencia Tributaria expects accurate records of each transaction, including dates, euro value, acquisition costs, wallet movements, and platform details. Crypto tax software may help reconcile thousands of on-chain and exchange transactions.
Several crypto tax platforms support Spanish tax forms and integrations, making compliance easier. Always ensure your data aligns with Agencia Tributaria requirements before filing.
Under Ley 11/2021, penalties for incorrect reporting or failure to declare foreign holdings can be severe, including fixed penalties per data omission. Spain has increased enforcement and exchange-level reporting to prevent evasion.
Spain’s crypto tax framework is one of the most detailed in Europe. With clear rules for disposals, income, foreign asset reporting, and DeFi activity, crypto investors must maintain organised records and file all required models correctly. Staying compliant helps avoid audits and penalties while ensuring transparent investment activity.

In May 2026, the anonymous account "Serenity" posted a 4502.45% annual return, earning the title "White‑Haired Stock God" and rapidly surpassing 750,000 followers on X. His core investment philosophy can be summarised as the "Shiso Leaf" theory and the "Chokepoint" theory – not chasing giants, but deeply cultivating irreplaceable "bottleneck" links in the industry chain, using public information to uncover undervalued assets. His holdings are concentrated in global small‑ to mid‑cap tech stocks in photonics, semiconductor substrates, and power semiconductors. CoinW has listed AI‑theme tokens such as TAO, RENDER, and FET, but no token exclusive to him. Risks to note include his unverified identity, post‑surge pullbacks, and high volatility in crypto assets.

In 2026, the U.S. equity AI investment logic is shifting from concept speculation to earnings delivery. A capital expenditure super-cycle, led by hyperscale cloud providers, has taken shape, with total annual CapEx expected to exceed $700 billion, securing order visibility for the industry chain over the next 12–24 months. Within the three‑tier structure of the industry chain, compute infrastructure (Nvidia, Broadcom, etc.) offers the highest certainty; the foundation model layer still faces unclear profitability paths; and the application software layer benefits from dual optimization of revenue and costs. Investment opportunities are spreading sequentially across compute, storage, optical communications, and power supply. CoinW has launched its TradFi zone, supporting trading in U.S. equities such as Nvidia and Google, as well as AI‑theme tokens including TAO, RENDER, and FET. Risks to watch include elevated valuations, slowing CapEx growth, and geopolitical factors.

On June 23, 2026, global stock markets suffered a synchronized sell-off: South Korea's KOSPI plunged 9.99% and triggered two circuit breakers, Japan's Nikkei 225 dropped 3.55%, China's A-share ChiNext fell 3.84%, and U.S. equity futures tumbled over 2% pre-market. The root cause lies in the AI trade shifting from "valuation expansion" to "earnings validation" – SpaceX lost 31% in three days (four simultaneous blows: acquisition dilution, bond issuance, options shorting, and fundamentals collapse), Google dropped 5% on talent departure, compounded by Korea's leveraged ETF regulatory scare, pre-earnings caution on Micron, and Fed hawkish signals pushing the 10‑year yield to 4.49%. The bigger test for SpaceX lies ahead with insider unlock in August.