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Policy

Coinbase Urges Congress to Treat Stablecoins Like Cash, Cut Crypto Tax Burdens

Coinbase's chief tax officer, Lawrence Zlatkin, testified before the House Ways and Means Committee on June 9, urging Congress to treat stablecoins like cash for tax purposes and reduce repor

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 10, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
Coinbase Urges Congress to Treat Stablecoins Like Cash, Cut Crypto Tax Burdens
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

Coinbase's chief tax officer, Lawrence Zlatkin, testified before the House Ways and Means Committee on June 9, urging Congress to treat stablecoins like cash for tax purposes and reduce reporting burdens that discourage everyday crypto transactions.

Why Coinbase Wants Stablecoins Treated Like Cash

The core of Coinbase's argument, laid out in Zlatkin's written testimony, is that dollar-pegged stablecoins function as digital cash rather than speculative investments. Unlike volatile cryptocurrencies, stablecoins maintain a 1:1 peg to the U.S. dollar, making them functionally equivalent to holding dollars in a digital wallet.

Cash-like treatment would mean users spending stablecoins on goods or services would not trigger capital gains calculations on each transaction. Currently, any disposition of a digital asset, including spending a stablecoin that has not moved in price, can technically create a taxable event requiring record-keeping and reporting.

This framing positions stablecoins as payment rails rather than trading instruments, a distinction that could open the door for broader merchant acceptance and consumer adoption in everyday commerce.

How Crypto Tax Burdens Limit Stablecoin Adoption

The friction Coinbase identifies is practical: a consumer buying coffee with stablecoins must currently track cost basis, calculate any gain or loss (however negligible), and report it at tax time. For small, frequent transactions, this compliance overhead far exceeds the economic substance of the activity.

Coin Center, a crypto policy nonprofit, has separately outlined six proposals for making crypto taxes work for everyday users, including de minimis exemptions for small transactions. Coinbase's testimony aligns with this broader push to reduce friction at the retail level.

Without relief, the tax complexity creates a perverse outcome: users hold stablecoins on exchanges but avoid spending them, limiting the utility that distinguishes stablecoins from traditional bank transfers. Businesses considering stablecoin payments face similar compliance costs that offset any efficiency gains.

What This Means for US Crypto Policy

Coinbase's appearance before Ways and Means signals that stablecoin tax treatment is now a legislative conversation, not just an industry wish list. The committee holds jurisdiction over federal tax code, making it the venue where any de minimis exemption or cash-equivalent classification would originate.

If Congress acts on these recommendations, the effects could extend beyond Coinbase users. Merchants accepting stablecoin payments, fintech apps building on networks like Base, and consumers using digital dollars for programmable wallet features would all benefit from reduced compliance overhead.

Clearer tax rules would also help projects upgrading their core protocols plan token economics without ambiguity around user-level tax obligations. The ripple effects of stablecoin classification could shape compliance frameworks across the broader digital asset ecosystem.

The proposal remains at the testimony stage, with no bill text introduced. Congressional action on crypto tax reform has historically moved slowly, and competing priorities in the current session mean any changes would likely require bipartisan support. How regulators choose to define digital asset exposure for traditional funds in parallel could also influence the legislative timeline.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

Read original article on coinlive.me