Coverage

What this crypto tax estimator covers, and where it stops

This page defines the operating boundary of the tool so you do not over-trust a result that was never designed for your activity. The goal is a first crypto tax estimate for an Australian individual investor, not a universal parser for every token event or DeFi structure.

Supported inputs

Built for the narrow slice that matters in a first crypto tax estimate

This version is intentionally strict. It solves the common Australian retail investor pattern before moving toward import flows, DeFi parsing, or lodge-ready outputs.

What it covers

Buys, sells, swaps, and staking income with user-entered AUD values for the 2025-26 tax year.

What it does not cover yet

Airdrops, NFTs, DeFi lending, liquidity pools, bridging, mining, entity tax rules, or exchange API sync.

How gains are handled

Disposals are matched to prior parcels using FIFO, then losses and discount logic are applied to estimate the taxable gain.

How to use the result

Use it as a planning estimate before talking to your accountant or preparing a more complete transaction ledger.

Fit

Good fit for some investor patterns, weak fit for others

The tool is strongest when the wallet history can be reduced to clear acquisitions, disposals, swaps, and staking receipts with known AUD values.

Good fit

Spot buys and sells, portfolio rebalances, crypto-to-crypto swaps, and staking receipts where you already have the AUD values.

Poor fit

Heavy DeFi use, liquidity pools, bridges, wrapped assets, mining, NFTs, airdrops, or entity-level tax analysis.

Why the manual AUD model exists

It avoids false precision from weak symbol mapping or historical price lookups. In this version, your own records control the valuation inputs.