The decision that sets your rate
In South Africa, whether a crypto gain is capital (Eighth Schedule, max effective ~18% for individuals) or revenue (income tax at 18%–45%) is the single biggest driver of your bill. There is no fixed holding period — SARS decides on your intention and the objective facts.
A practical flowchart
Work through these questions for each holding:
- Did you acquire it intending to hold for long-term growth? If clearly yes, that points to capital.
- Did you acquire it intending to resell at a profit, or as part of a profit-making scheme? If yes, that points to revenue.
- How frequently do you trade? High frequency and short holding periods point to revenue.
- Is it organised like a business? Bots, leverage, dedicated capital and systematic dealing point to revenue.
- Is crypto a main or substantial income source? That points to revenue.
- Do you buy-and-hold a small set of assets, reinvesting rather than realising? That points to capital.
No single factor is decisive — SARS weighs the whole picture.
Intention can change
An asset held as an investment can be brought into trading stock (and vice versa). A change of intention itself has tax consequences, so document when and why your intention changed.
Why evidence beats assertion
You cannot simply *declare* a gain capital. Keep contemporaneous records — notes at acquisition, your trading patterns, holding periods — because a justification written years later carries little weight in an audit.
Not tax advice
The capital-vs-revenue line is fact-specific — confirm with a registered tax practitioner.
Frequently asked questions
Is there a holding period that makes crypto capital in South Africa?
How do I prove a gain is capital?
Can my treatment change over time?
Sources
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