Crypto

Illinois Will Tax Crypto Transfers At 0.2% Starting 2027


Most crypto tax laws target what you earn. Illinois is targeting something different: the simple act of moving your own crypto from one place to another. Under Illinois SB3019, which adds a new “Digital Asset Tax Act” to state law, Illinois residents could owe a 0.2% tax every time they transfer crypto, regardless of whether they made a single dollar in profit. This is not a capital gains tax. It is a transactional tax, and it is unlike anything we have seen another state attempt. If you live in Illinois or use an exchange that serves Illinois customers, here is what you need to understand before January 1, 2027.

Illinois SB3019 Creates a 0.2% Transfer Tax On Crypto

The distinction between a capital gains tax and a transactional tax matters a great deal here. A capital gains tax applies when you sell an asset for more than your cost basis (what you originally paid for it). You only pay when you profit. A transactional tax, like the one Illinois SB3019 creates, applies to the act of moving an asset itself. Profit is irrelevant. Under this law, simply sending your crypto from one account to another triggers the tax.

The new “Digital Asset Tax Act” sets the rate at 0.2% of the value of any crypto transferred. The tax applies to transactions occurring after January 1, 2027, so Illinois residents currently have time to plan. But the clock is already ticking, and the structure of this law means the costs can stack up quickly in ways that are not immediately obvious.

The Definition of “Transfer” Is Intentionally Broad

One of the most striking features of SB3019 is how widely it defines a taxable transfer. It captures moving crypto between two accounts you own at the same broker, such as shifting funds from a trading account to a vault at the same exchange. It also covers withdrawals, gifts, payments to merchants, and sending crypto to a self-custodial wallet (a private wallet you control directly, without a third-party custodian).

In practical terms, this means routine account maintenance could trigger taxable events. Reorganizing your holdings across accounts, withdrawing to cold storage for security purposes, or simply paying someone with crypto could all generate a 0.2% tax under this law.

Every Major Centralized Exchange Serving Illinois Customers Can be Subject to Collecting This Tax

The obligation to collect and remit this tax falls on the exchange, not the individual. Under SB3019, any centralized exchange (think Coinbase or Kraken) that physically operates in Illinois must collect the tax. Beyond that, any exchange operating outside Illinois that earns more than $100,000 from Illinois customers in a rolling 12-month period also falls under the law. That threshold is low enough to capture virtually every major centralized exchange that has Illinois users. The broker collects the 0.2% and sends it directly to the state, much like a merchant collects sales tax at checkout.

This design means Illinois residents may not feel the tax as a bill they write themselves. Instead, they will simply see a smaller amount arrive in their destination account after each transfer.

The Double-Taxation Problem Is Real and Unavoidable Under This Law

Suppose you are an Illinois resident and you move $1,000 worth of Bitcoin (BTC) from your trading account to a vault at the same exchange. Your broker collects $2 (0.2% of $1,000), and $998 arrives in the vault. Now suppose you decide to withdraw that $998 to your self-custodial wallet. The same 0.2% rate applies again, costing you roughly another $2. The same crypto, moved twice in a routine workflow, gets taxed twice. No gain was realized. No income was generated. The only thing that happened was that you moved your own property.

What Illinois Residents Should Consider Doing Before January 1, 2027

The January 1, 2027, effective date gives Illinois residents several months to think through how they hold and manage their crypto. Some practical considerations are worth raising now.

First, minimize unnecessary transfers where possible. If consolidating accounts or reducing the number of wallets you actively use makes sense for your situation, doing that before the law takes effect reduces future tax exposure.

Second, keep clean records of your cost basis across all wallets and accounts. While cost basis tracking is a federal requirement for calculating capital gains, it becomes even more important when transfer taxes are layered on top, since every movement affects the net amount you are working with.

Third, watch for legal challenges. A transactional tax on moving property is legally aggressive, and it would not be surprising to see court challenges before 2027 arrives.

Most states tax gains. Illinois wants to tax the act of moving your own property. If SB3019 survives legal scrutiny and takes effect as written, it sets a precedent that other states will be watching closely. Illinois residents should be watching even more closely.

Disclaimer: This post is informational only and is not intended as tax advice. For tax advice, please consult a qualified tax professional.

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