Arkansas Crypto Tax — Rates, Rules & Complete Guide (2026)

Last updated: June 2, 2026

Arkansas crypto tax has two layers: the federal tax that applies to everyone, and the Arkansas state tax on top. Arkansas does charge a state income tax (roughly 0% to 3.7%), and it applies to your crypto gains on top of federal tax. This Arkansas crypto tax guide explains the rates, how gains are treated, what happens with mining and staking, and practical ways to lower your bill in 2026.

For crypto investors, Arkansas is generally considered crypto-friendly.

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How Arkansas Taxes Cryptocurrency

The IRS treats cryptocurrency as property, so selling, trading, or spending crypto is a taxable event at the federal level. Arkansas then applies its own income tax to those gains. Arkansas’s general approach: follows federal — property; no Arkansas-specific crypto tax statute.

Recent Arkansas changes: Top individual income tax rate cut from 3.9% to 3.7% retroactive to Jan 1 2026 (HB 1001 signed May 2026); net capital gains exceeding 10 million dollars are exempt from state tax; 2023 crypto mining law facing proposed rollback of local regulation restrictions in 2026 fiscal session

Arkansas Crypto Tax Rates

Arkansas Crypto Tax Factor Detail
State income tax Yes — 0% to 3.7%
Top marginal rate 3.7%
Capital gains treatment Taxed As Ordinary Income But 50% Of Net Long-Term Capital Gains Are Deductible — Effective Top Rate Is 1.85%
Crypto classification Follows federal — property; no arkansas-specific crypto tax statute
Investor friendliness Crypto-Friendly

As a rough example, a $10,000 long-term crypto gain could cost a middle-income Arkansas filer about $185 in state tax — on top of federal capital-gains tax.

Your actual Arkansas rate depends on your total taxable income, filing status, and how long you held the asset. Short-term gains (held one year or less) are generally taxed as ordinary income; long-term gains may receive better treatment federally.

Federal Crypto Tax (Applies to Everyone)

No matter where you live, the IRS taxes crypto as property:

  • Short-term gains (held one year or less): taxed as ordinary income, 10%-37%.
  • Long-term gains (held more than one year): taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on income.
  • Crypto income (mining, staking, airdrops): taxed as ordinary income at its fair market value when received.

Mining, Staking & Airdrops in Arkansas

Crypto income from mining, staking, and airdrops is taxed by Arkansas as ordinary income at your regular state rate.

How to Reduce Your Arkansas Crypto Taxes

  • Hold longer than a year to qualify for lower long-term federal rates.
  • Harvest losses to offset gains within the same tax year.
  • Keep complete records of cost basis for every transaction.
  • Consider timing — realizing gains in a lower-income year can reduce the rate.
  • Plan around residency — some investors weigh relocating to a no-income-tax state, but real relocation rules are strict.

Official Sources

Other Arkansas notes: Arkansas allows a 50% deduction on net long-term capital gains reducing the effective top rate to 1.85%; gains on assets held less than one year are taxed at the full rate up to 3.7%; this is the fourth income tax cut in four years; two ballot initiatives are underway to eliminate the state income tax entirely

What Counts as a Taxable Crypto Event

You owe tax when you dispose of crypto, not when you simply hold it. Taxable events include:

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  • Selling crypto for dollars.
  • Trading one cryptocurrency for another.
  • Spending crypto on goods or services.
  • Earning crypto from mining, staking, interest, or airdrops (taxed as income).

Buying and holding crypto, or moving it between your own wallets, is not taxable.

Crypto Tax Forms You Will Need

For your 2026 return, expect to use:

  • Form 1099-DA — exchanges now report your activity to the IRS.
  • Form 8949 — lists each individual crypto sale or trade.
  • Schedule D — totals your capital gains and losses.
  • Schedule 1 — reports crypto income such as staking or mining.

Arkansas uses your federal numbers as the starting point for any state return, so accurate federal records make state filing straightforward.

Short-Term vs Long-Term Gains: An Example

Holding period decides your federal rate, and it flows through to Arkansas too. Say a Arkansas investor buys $5,000 of Bitcoin and later sells for $9,000 — a $4,000 gain:

  • Sold within one year (short-term): the $4,000 is taxed as ordinary income at both the federal and Arkansas level.
  • Sold after one year (long-term): the $4,000 gets lower federal long-term rates, while Arkansas still applies its normal income tax.

Waiting past the one-year mark can meaningfully cut the federal portion of the bill.

Common Arkansas Crypto Tax Mistakes to Avoid

  • Forgetting crypto-to-crypto trades — swapping one coin for another is taxable, even with no cash involved.
  • Ignoring small transactions — the IRS now receives exchange reporting, so unreported activity stands out.
  • Losing cost-basis records — without a purchase price you may overpay.
  • Skipping the income side — staking and airdrops are taxable when received, not just when sold.

Arkansas Crypto Tax: Frequently Asked Questions

Do I owe Arkansas tax on crypto? Yes — Arkansas taxes crypto gains as part of your state income tax, on top of federal tax.

Is crypto taxed when I buy it? No. Buying and holding is not taxable. Tax applies only when you sell, trade, or spend it.

What if I only had losses? Capital losses offset gains, and up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year federally, with any remainder carried forward to future years.

Are mining and staking taxed in Arkansas? Yes — as ordinary income at your Arkansas rate, plus federal tax.

This Arkansas crypto tax guide was last verified in June 2026.

Informational only — not financial, tax, or legal advice. Crypto and tax rules change frequently; verify current details with the official sources linked above or a licensed professional before acting.

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