Earlier this summer, Washington and Pennsylvania became the first two states to tax the sale of non-fungible tokens, or NFTs. If other states follow their lead, the NFT marketplace, which has relied heavily on anonymity and a lack of government oversite, could face new challenges.
In June, Pennsylvaniaâs Department of Revenue âquietlyâ designated NFTs as taxable, though it provided no further instruction, reportsHyperallergicâs Jasmine Liu. Then, in July, Washingtonâs Department of Revenue released astatementlaying out preliminary taxation guidance, which indicates that the state will eventually require sellers to document where purchases take place.
Both states could retroactively collect money related to NFT sales going back several years. The reason, perHyperallergic, is that the new guidelines are both â[interpretations of] existing law rather than enactments of entirely new legislation.â
NFTsare unreplicable digital files, which can take the form of anything from concert tickets to Twitter profile pictures. (At the moment, they are particularly popularwithin the art market.) They are a âproof of ownership over a digital item,âWiredâs Eric Ravenscraft writes, which is part of the draw of owning oneâthe value derives from its exclusivity.
Some NFTs are indeed quite valuable: NFT sales hit $25 billion in 2021,ReutersâElizabeth Howcroft reports. In March 2021, the artist Beeple sold one of his NFTs for$69 million. Earlier this year, the artist Pak sold his NFT artwork, titledClock, for over$52 million.
NFTs have always had detractors, who denounce them asget-rich-quick schemes, among other criticisms. And the 2022 cryptocurrency market isnât booming the way it did in 2021. Still, where money can be made, money can be taxedâand state revenue officials are taking notice, New York lawyer Amelia K. Brankov tells theArt Newspaperâs Daniel Grant.
Another defining feature of NFTs is the baked-in anonymity. NFT transactionsoccur on the blockchain, which allows people to buy and sell without being traced. This feature will complicate how NFTs are taxed in Washington and Pennsylvania, explainsArtforum, since many transactions occur between unidentified buyers and sellers in unknown locations.
âPreviously, sellers and buyers of NFTs werenât evading taxesâthey were merely enjoying the lack of regulations,â writesARTnewsâShanti Escalante-De Mattei. âWhether people are willing to explicitly evade taxes is a different matter entirely.â
For over 80 years, the Scurlock photography studio catalogued the lives of the black middle class of Washington, D.C (The exhibit, The Scurlock Studio and Black Washington: Picturing the Promise, is on view at the National Museum of American History through November 15, 2009. Thanks to Lonnie Bunch, Director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, which co-organized the exhibit)
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/nft-taxation-washington-pennsylvania-180980744/