How to Get Crypto.com Tax Documents for Filing (App, Exchange, and Tax)

You’re trying to file taxes, but your Crypto.com activity is split across the App, the Exchange, and sometimes DeFi Wallet. The friction is that “tax documents” can mean different things: a pre-built tax report, a raw transaction export, or a form your accountant expects. This walkthrough shows how to get the right files, verify they’re complete, and avoid the common gaps that cause mismatched gains.
TL;DR
- You’ll be able to export Crypto.com transaction history and generate a tax report you can file with.
- Expect 10–30 minutes if your activity is mostly inside Crypto.com.
- Most people get tripped up by missing data from the Exchange/DeFi Wallet or the wrong date range.
Crypto.com doesn’t always hand you a single “one-click” tax form that covers every product you used. What you can reliably do is export complete transaction history from each place you traded (App and/or Exchange, plus DeFi Wallet if you used it), then generate a report in Crypto.com Tax or your preferred tax software. The key is making sure you’re exporting the right dataset (trades vs transfers vs rewards) and that your time window matches your tax year.
What you need before you start
You’ll move faster if you gather a few things up front, because the most common failure is exporting the wrong account’s history or missing a chunk of activity.
You need access to the same Crypto.com account(s) you used during the tax year: the Crypto.com App account and, if you used it, the Crypto.com Exchange account (they can be linked but still have separate exports). If you used Crypto.com DeFi Wallet, you’ll also want the wallet address(es) you transacted with, because those transactions typically won’t appear in an App/Exchange export.
Have a laptop handy even if you normally use mobile. Exports and report generation are usually easier to verify on desktop, and you’ll want a place to store CSV/PDF files. Plan to download and keep copies of your raw exports (CSV) even if you also generate a summarized report; the CSV is what you’ll need when something doesn’t reconcile.
Make sure you know your tax year date range (for many people that’s Jan 1–Dec 31, but not everywhere). If you’re not sure, don’t guess—use the date range your tax authority requires, because a one-day mismatch can create “missing cost basis” warnings later.
Step-by-step
Map where you transacted: List which Crypto.com products you actually used during the year: App (buy/sell, Earn, card rewards), Exchange (spot trades), and DeFi Wallet (on-chain swaps, staking, bridging). This matters because each product can produce a different export, and a “complete” tax report is only complete if every source is included. Before moving on, confirm you can log into each product and that you recognize the email/account tied to it.
Export App transaction history: In the Crypto.com App, look for an export option in the accounts/transaction history area (the wording varies by region and app version, but you’re aiming for a CSV export of your full transaction history). The reason to start here is the App often includes the broadest set of activity—buys/sells, deposits/withdrawals, rewards, and internal transfers. Before you proceed, verify the export covers the full tax year and that it includes more than just “trades” (you want rewards/interest entries too if you earned them).
Export Exchange trade history: If you used the Crypto.com Exchange, log into the Exchange on desktop and download your spot trade history and any deposit/withdrawal history available. This matters because Exchange fills can differ from App records, and missing Exchange fills is a classic reason your tax software thinks you “sold coins you never bought.” Before moving on, check that the file includes timestamps, trading pairs, executed quantity, and fees; if you only see order history without fills, you grabbed the wrong export.
Pull DeFi Wallet on-chain activity: If you used Crypto.com DeFi Wallet, identify the wallet address(es) and the networks you used (for example, Cronos or Ethereum). On-chain activity usually needs to be imported by address into a tax tool rather than exported from the App. This step matters because on-chain swaps, liquidity moves, and staking actions can create taxable events or cost-basis changes that won’t appear in centralized exchange exports. Before moving on, confirm you have the exact public address (not a memo/tag) and that you’re looking at the right network for that address.
Generate a Crypto.com Tax report: Use Crypto.com’s tax reporting product (Crypto.com Tax) to import your CSVs and/or connect sources, then generate the report for your tax year. This is the practical answer to how to get crypto.com tax documents when you need something more structured than raw CSVs: it can categorize transactions and produce a capital gains summary and income totals. Before moving on, confirm the report’s tax year setting matches your required date range and that the number of transactions imported roughly matches what you expect from the App/Exchange exports.
Reconcile totals before exporting: Scan for obvious red flags: large “unknown deposits,” negative balances, or warnings about missing cost basis. This matters because a tax report is only as good as its inputs; if you have missing buys, your gains can be overstated. Before moving on, spot-check a few big events you remember (a major buy, a major sell, a big transfer) and make sure they appear once, not twice.
Export the documents you’ll actually file with: Download the outputs your filing workflow needs: typically a capital gains report (often compatible with common tax filing formats), an income/rewards summary if applicable, and keep the raw CSV exports as backup. This step matters because “tax documents” can mean different deliverables depending on whether you’re filing yourself, using a CPA, or importing into third-party software. Before you finish, open the exported files and confirm they’re not empty, the date range is correct, and the currency/fiat settings match how you file.
What goes wrong
Wrong date range exported
- Symptom: Your report is missing early-year buys or late-year sells, or totals don’t match your own records.
- Fix: Re-export using the exact tax-year window, then regenerate the report; don’t mix “last 12 months” with a calendar-year requirement.
Exchange activity missing from the report
- Symptom: You see “missing cost basis” or “unknown acquisition” for coins you definitely bought on the Exchange.
- Fix: Export Exchange fills/trade history (not just orders) and import it as a separate source; then re-run reconciliation.
DeFi Wallet transactions not included
- Symptom: Your on-chain balances don’t match the report, or you’re missing swaps/bridges/staking actions.
- Fix: Import by wallet address into the tax tool and ensure the correct network is selected; repeat for each address you used.
Duplicate transactions after importing
- Symptom: Trades or transfers appear twice, inflating volume and sometimes creating fake gains.
- Fix: Remove one of the overlapping sources (for example, both a “unified” export and a per-account export), or use the tool’s duplicate-detection/merge settings if available.
Transfers misclassified as taxable sales
- Symptom: Simple deposits/withdrawals show up as disposals, creating gains where you expected none.
- Fix: Ensure both sides of the transfer are present (withdrawal and matching deposit) and label them as transfers in the tax tool when it supports that workflow.
Rewards/interest not categorized correctly
- Symptom: Earned amounts show as deposits with “unknown source,” or income totals look too low.
- Fix: Confirm the App export includes reward/interest lines; if it does, map those transaction types to income categories in the tax tool and regenerate the income summary.
When this isn't the right move
If you only need a narrow slice of tax info from Crypto.com—like proving a single deposit, withdrawal, or trade for an audit question—generating a full tax report can be overkill. In that case, a raw CSV export plus the matching blockchain transaction hash (for on-chain transfers) is often the cleanest evidence.
If your activity spans multiple exchanges and wallets, relying on a single platform’s report can also be misleading. Crypto.com Tax can help, but you may be better served importing everything into one dedicated tax workflow so transfers reconcile across platforms instead of being treated as disposals.
Tools and references
Crypto.com (account access and exports) Crypto.com Exchange Crypto.com Tax