21/01/2026
Does Keeping Your Crypto Wallet Abroad Change Your Tax Position? What Investors Need to Know
As crypto investing becomes more mainstream, many investors are becoming increasingly mobile. It’s not uncommon for people to hold their digital assets on overseas exchanges, foreign custodial platforms, or hardware wallets stored abroad.
A question I hear regularly is:
“If my crypto wallet is based overseas, does that change how it’s taxed?”
The short answer is: usually no.
Your tax position is driven far more by where you live than where your crypto wallet is located
Here’s what every crypto investor should understand before assuming offshore wallets offer tax advantages.
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1. Tax Residence Is What Really Matters
In most countries — including the UK — your tax liability is based on your tax residence, not the location of your assets.
If you are a UK tax resident, you are generally taxable on your worldwide income and gains. That includes:
• Crypto held on overseas exchanges
• Tokens stored in foreign custodial wallets
• Hardware wallets kept outside the UK
• DeFi platforms hosted abroad
From HMRC’s perspective, crypto is treated as an asset. Where the private keys are stored or where the exchange is based is largely irrelevant. If you are UK tax resident, HMRC expects to see those transactions reported.
Moving your wallet offshore does not, by itself, move your tax obligations offshore…and that makes sense, for whilst the wallet can be abroad, it’s you that has the key and even if you’ve given the key to a trusted person abroad, they will still act on your instruction.
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2. Capital Gains Tax Still Applies
For most individual investors, crypto is subject to Capital Gains Tax (CGT) when you dispose of it. This includes:
• Selling crypto for fiat
• Swapping one token for another
• Using crypto to buy goods or services
• Gifting crypto (other than to a spouse)
If you hold your crypto on an overseas exchange and later sell it, the gain is still reportable in the UK.
The taxable gain is calculated as:
Sale proceeds
minus
Original purchase cost
minus
Allowable transaction fees
It makes no difference whether the exchange is based in London, Dubai, Singapore or the Cayman Islands. The tax point is triggered by your disposal — not the location of the platform.
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3. Offshore Wallets Do Not Create Offshore Income
Some investors assume that holding crypto overseas somehow converts gains into “foreign income”. This is a dangerous misunderstanding. Crypto gains are not treated as foreign income simply because the wallet is abroad. They remain capital gains arising to a UK resident.
In fact, the UK’s “remittance basis” rules — which can apply to non-domiciled individuals — generally do not apply to crypto in the same way as traditional offshore income and bank accounts. HMRC has made it clear that crypto’s location is based on the owner’s residence, not the exchange. In other words, you cannot shelter crypto gains offshore simply by parking your wallet abroad.
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4. What If You Later Move Overseas?
Where things can change is if you become non-UK tax resident.
If you leave the UK and genuinely break tax residence under the Statutory Residence Test, future crypto disposals may fall outside the UK tax net — depending on where you move and how long you stay away.
However, there are important pitfalls:
• The UK has temporary non-residence rules
• If you return within five years, gains realised while abroad can be pulled back into UK tax
• Your new country of residence may tax your crypto instead
Simply moving your wallet overseas without moving yourself does not achieve the same result.
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5. Reporting and Compliance Is Increasing
Crypto is no longer the hidden corner of finance it once was. Global tax authorities are rapidly improving transparency through:
• Exchange reporting regimes
• Information sharing agreements
• Blockchain analytics
• KYC and AML data
The OECD’s new Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) will require exchanges worldwide to share transaction data with tax authorities. Offshore platforms are becoming far less “offshore” in practice.
HMRC already receives data from major exchanges and regularly issues “nudge letters” to investors who appear not to have declared their crypto activity.
If your wallet is abroad, that does not mean HMRC can’t see it.
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6. Common Mistakes Investors Make
Some of the most common — and costly — errors include:
• Assuming offshore wallets are tax-free
• Failing to track transactions across multiple exchanges
• Ignoring token-to-token swaps
• Forgetting about staking and yield income
• Losing historic cost data
Crypto record-keeping is notoriously difficult, but HMRC expects full transaction histories and accurate calculations, and if records are incomplete, HMRC can estimate your gains — usually not in your favour.
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7. Practical Planning Tips
If you hold crypto across multiple jurisdictions, good planning is essential:
• Keep detailed transaction records
• Track GBP values at transaction dates
• Understand your residence position
• Review your exposure before moving countries
• Take advice before large disposals
For larger portfolios, pre-exit planning before leaving the UK can be especially valuable.
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Final Thoughts
👉Keeping your crypto wallet abroad may feel like a smart move — but from a tax perspective, it usually changes very little.
👉If you are a UK tax resident, HMRC will still expect you to report your worldwide crypto gains, wherever your wallet is stored.
👉In today’s environment of increasing transparency, offshore no longer means invisible.
Crypto may be decentralised — but tax authorities are not.
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