Solana Tax Guide 2026: SOL Staking, Airdrops, NFTs & DeFi Explained
Solana is one of the most active blockchains — and one of the hardest to report correctly. Its speed and low fees mean more transactions per user, staking pays out constantly, the 2024 airdrops created income for people who never sold, and liquid staking sits in unsettled territory. This guide walks through how SOL is taxed in 2026: staking, airdrops, swaps, NFTs, memecoins, and the per-wallet rule, with worked examples and the gray areas flagged honestly.
How is Solana taxed in 2026?
The IRS treats SOL as property under Notice 2014-21 — the same rules as Bitcoin or any digital asset. Two tax categories apply:
- Capital gains — when you dispose of SOL: selling for dollars, trading for another token (including stablecoins), or spending it. Gain = proceeds minus cost basis.
- Ordinary income — when you earn SOL or other tokens: staking rewards, airdrops, and DeFi yield, taxed at fair market value when received.
Federal rates
| Holding period | Federal rate |
|---|---|
| Long-term (over 1 year) | 0%, 15%, or 20% |
| Short-term (1 year or less) & income | 10% to 37% ordinary |
Plus 3.8% NIIT for high earners and 0–13.3% state tax depending on residency.
Solana staking tax: why it is so hard
This is where Solana gets genuinely complicated. Under IRS Rev. Rul. 2023-14, staking rewards are ordinary income at fair market value when you gain "dominion and control" — when you can sell or move them.
The two-layer tax on staking
- Income on receipt: Each reward is ordinary income at its value the day received. If you earn 1 SOL worth $140 that day, you owe income tax on $140.
- Capital gain on sale: That $140 becomes your cost basis. When you later sell, you have a separate capital gain or loss measured from there.
There is no minimum threshold — whether you earned $20 or $20,000 in staking rewards, you must report it. Staking income goes on Schedule 1 line 8z "Other Income"; sales go on Form 8949 and Schedule D.
Worked example: Solana staking
Scenario: You stake 100 SOL. Over a year you earn 5 SOL in rewards while SOL averages $100. Later SOL rises to $150 and you sell those 5 SOL.
- Income on receipt: 5 SOL × $100 = $500 ordinary income (spread across ~120 epoch events)
- Cost basis in those 5 SOL: $500
- Sale: 5 SOL × $150 = $750 proceeds
- Capital gain: $750 − $500 = $250
- You are taxed twice: $500 as income, then $250 as a capital gain
Solana airdrops: the 2024 surprise
If you used Solana in 2024, you almost certainly received airdrops — Jupiter, Kamino, Drift, Wormhole, WEN, and PENGU were among the biggest. Airdrops are ordinary income at fair market value when you claim them (when you gain control), even if you never sell. That value becomes your cost basis for future sales.
Liquid staking (mSOL, jitoSOL, bSOL): a gray area
Liquid staking lets you stake SOL through a protocol (Marinade, Jito) and receive a token representing your staked SOL plus rewards. The tax treatment is unsettled:
- Conservative (majority) approach: Depositing SOL for mSOL is a taxable crypto-to-crypto swap. The IRS has not issued definitive guidance.
- Alternative position: Some argue minting/redeeming a liquid staking token is not a taxable event (a legal memo from Jito Labs took this view), with tax applying only when you sell.
- Appreciation: mSOL, jitoSOL, and bSOL rise in value as rewards accrue. Under the alternative view, this appreciation is capital gains when sold, not income.
This is genuinely unsettled — the choice affects your tax and your audit risk. Confirm your position with a crypto-experienced CPA.
Solana swaps, DeFi, and the volume problem
Every swap on Jupiter, Raydium, or Orca is a taxable disposal of the input token. Solana's speed means a single trading session can generate dozens of swaps, each a separate taxable event. Key points:
- Jupiter swaps: taxed as disposals. Limit orders are taxable when they execute, not when placed; unfulfilled orders are non-taxable.
- DCA orders: each automated purchase is an individual buy event with its own cost basis.
- Bridging: the IRS most likely views bridging SOL to another chain as a disposal on one chain and acquisition on the other — report it like a swap, not a transfer.
- Transaction fees: paid in SOL, added to cost basis on buys or subtracted from proceeds on sells. Failed-transaction fees still incur a cost.
Solana NFTs and memecoins
Solana has a large NFT market (Magic Eden, Tensor) and a huge memecoin scene (BONK, WIF, POPCAT). Both are taxed as property:
- Buying an NFT with SOL: a taxable disposal of that SOL (you traded SOL for the NFT)
- Selling an NFT: capital gain or loss against what you paid
- Minting: creates a cost basis equal to the SOL spent; receiving royalties as a creator is ordinary income
- Memecoins (SPL tokens): capital gains on sale, income on receipt — same rules, though newer tokens can have unreliable price data
- Collectible NFTs may face the higher 28% collectibles rate — an unsettled area worth professional review if you trade heavily
The per-wallet cost basis rule (2026)
As of January 1, 2026, the IRS requires per-wallet cost basis tracking under Rev. Proc. 2024-28 — you can no longer pool cost basis across wallets. For Solana users who spread activity across Phantom, Solflare, and Backpack wallets, this is a major change. Each wallet is treated as a separate account, and you must carry basis correctly when moving SOL between your own wallets. Add every wallet address separately when using tax software.
No 1099 for self-custody Solana
Most Solana activity happens in self-custody wallets, and no exchange sends a 1099 for any of it. Every swap, stake, claim, mint, and DeFi action in your wallet is your responsibility to track. Centralized exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken) that support SOL do report, but your on-chain Phantom or Solflare activity is entirely self-reported.
Common Solana tax mistakes
- Ignoring epoch rewards. 120+ tiny income events a year are easy to miss without software.
- Forgetting 2024 airdrops. They are income at claim even if you never sold.
- Treating swaps as non-events. Every Jupiter/Raydium swap is a disposal.
- Mishandling liquid staking. mSOL/jitoSOL wraps are a gray area — pick a defensible position.
- Pooling cost basis across wallets. The per-wallet rule now forbids this.
- Treating bridging as a transfer. The IRS likely sees it as a swap.
- Missing self-custody activity. No 1099 does not mean no tax obligation.
Frequently asked questions about Solana tax
How is Solana taxed?
Solana is taxed as property by the IRS. Selling, trading, or spending SOL triggers capital gains tax (0–20% long-term, 10–37% short-term). Staking rewards and airdrops are ordinary income at fair market value when received. State tax adds 0–13.3% depending on residency.
Are Solana staking rewards taxable?
Yes. Per IRS Rev. Rul. 2023-14, staking rewards are ordinary income at fair market value when you gain control. Solana pays rewards every epoch (~2–3 days), so a single stake can create 120+ separate income events per year. There is no minimum threshold — even $20 in rewards must be reported on Schedule 1.
Are Solana airdrops taxable?
Yes. Airdrops are ordinary income at fair market value when you claim them and gain control, even if you never sell. The 2024 Solana airdrops (Jupiter, Kamino, Drift, and others) created taxable income for many users. The claimed value becomes your cost basis for future sales.
Is liquid staking (mSOL, jitoSOL) taxable?
This is an unsettled gray area. The conservative position treats depositing SOL for a liquid staking token as a taxable swap. An alternative view (supported by a Jito Labs legal memo) treats minting and redeeming as non-taxable, with tax only on sale. The IRS has not issued definitive guidance, so confirm your position with a crypto-experienced CPA.
Do I pay tax on Solana swaps?
Yes. Every swap on Jupiter, Raydium, Orca, or any Solana DEX is a taxable disposal of the input token. Limit orders are taxable when they execute, not when placed. Solana's high transaction volume means a single session can create many separate taxable events.
Does Solana report to the IRS?
No. Solana is a decentralized network and does not report user activity. However, centralized exchanges that support SOL (Coinbase, Kraken) do report. Your self-custody wallet activity (Phantom, Solflare, Backpack) is entirely your responsibility to track and report — no 1099 is issued for it.
How do I report Solana on my taxes?
Staking rewards and airdrops go on Schedule 1 as "Other Income." Sales, swaps, and disposals go on Form 8949 and Schedule D. Because Solana generates so many transactions, most users need crypto tax software that supports epoch staking detection and per-wallet cost basis tracking.
What is the per-wallet rule for Solana?
As of January 1, 2026, the IRS requires cost basis to be tracked per wallet under Rev. Proc. 2024-28 — you can no longer pool basis across wallets. For Solana users with multiple wallets (Phantom, Solflare, Backpack), each is treated separately, and you must carry basis correctly when moving SOL between your own wallets.
Are Solana memecoins and NFTs taxed?
Yes. Memecoins like BONK or WIF follow standard crypto rules: capital gains on sale, income on receipt. Solana NFTs are property too — buying an NFT with SOL is a taxable disposal of that SOL, and selling is a capital gain or loss. Some collectible NFTs may face the higher 28% collectibles rate.
How are Solana transaction fees taxed?
SOL transaction fees can be added to your cost basis when buying or subtracted from proceeds when selling, reducing your taxable gain. Failed transactions still incur fees, which are tracked as fee-only events. Good software handles these automatically given Solana's high transaction count.
Bottom line for Solana holders
Solana is one of the most complex coins to report — not because the rules differ, but because of volume and gray areas. Staking pays every epoch (120+ income events a year), 2024 airdrops created income even for non-sellers, liquid staking tokens sit in unsettled territory, and the new per-wallet rule forbids pooling basis across your Phantom, Solflare, and Backpack wallets. Self-custody activity gets no 1099, so tracking is entirely on you. The two-layer rule is key: rewards and airdrops are income when received, then capital gains when sold. Given the transaction volume, manual spreadsheets break down — most Solana users need software with epoch staking detection and per-wallet tracking. Use the calculator below for a quick estimate of your 2026 SOL tax, and consult a crypto-experienced CPA for liquid staking and heavy DeFi positions.
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