The White House is weighing whether to join an international reporting framework that could fundamentally change how the IRS tracks Americans' crypto holdings abroad. It's the kind of shift that would turn offshore accounts from a regulatory blind spot into something approaching full transparency.
What the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework Actually Does
According to reports first published by Decrypto on Monday, the administration is evaluating U.S. participation in the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework, a system the OECD built in 2022 to combat offshore tax evasion. CARF works like this: participating countries agree to automatically exchange information about their residents' cryptocurrency holdings with each other's tax authorities.
Most of America's economic peers have already signed on. That includes Japan, Germany, France, Canada, Italy, and the United Kingdom. Major crypto jurisdictions like Singapore, the UAE, and the Bahamas are in too. The United States remains one of the few major financial centers still sitting on the sidelines.
Earlier this year, the Trump administration directed Treasury and the IRS to explore adopting the policy as part of broader efforts to strengthen tax transparency in the digital asset space.
The White House Case for Participation
White House advisors argue that joining CARF would remove the incentive for Americans to park their crypto overseas. If foreign platforms are required to report account data back to Washington anyway, the logic goes, there's little benefit to moving assets abroad in the first place.
The administration also framed participation as a matter of competitive fairness. Without joining CARF, U.S.-based exchanges could face disadvantages compared to compliant foreign competitors operating under uniform global standards.
The policy directive instructed Treasury and the IRS to draft implementation rules but included a notable carve-out: new regulations "should not impose any new reporting requirements on DeFi transactions." That language reflects ongoing industry pushback against overreach into decentralized finance protocols.
Implementation Timeline Points to 2027
CARF is set to go live globally in 2027, giving member nations time to finalize compliance frameworks and build the infrastructure needed for cross-border data exchange. If the U.S. decides to participate, it would begin coordinating with dozens of jurisdictions on shared reporting standards for digital assets.
The review represents one of the more significant regulatory decisions of the administration's second term and fits into a broader recalibration of federal crypto policy. SEC Chair Paul Atkins recently outlined narrower criteria for determining when tokens should be treated as securities, signaling a shift toward more targeted enforcement.
Why This Changes the Offshore Playbook
For more than a decade, moving crypto offshore has been a way to operate outside the immediate reach of U.S. tax reporting. CARF would close that gap. If the U.S. joins, exchanges in Singapore, the UAE, and the Bahamas would be required to send wallet and transaction data on American account holders directly to the IRS. Offshore accounts would become just as visible as domestic ones, practically overnight.
This isn't about stricter rules within U.S. borders. It's about extending visibility across them. Crypto is being pulled into the same compliance infrastructure that governs traditional banking, where cross-border transparency is the norm and jurisdictional arbitrage is increasingly difficult to execute.
For investors who've relied on foreign platforms to stay under the radar, the implications are clear: moving assets abroad may soon offer no protection from IRS oversight. The era of crypto exceptionalism, at least when it comes to tax reporting, is narrowing fast.