Chile: Cryptocurrencies in Chile

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Chile: Cryptocurrencies in Chile

intl-updates

Cryptocurrencies have been in the market for some considerable time. In fact, some have been around for almost two decades. Despite this, there has never been a real interest by the Chilean tax authorities in providing an opinion on the matter of how they should be taxed. That is, until now.

The high prices at which the cryptocurrencies were being trade during 2017 caused them to catch the attention of the public, and big investors began to appear.

Investment in cryptocurrencies is a volatile investment of high risk that can yield large losses or profits. With the high trading prices as well, the Chilean tax authorities are now showing an interest. If taxpayers are making profits, they should be levied with taxes.

Taxpayers should declare their profits or losses for 2017 in April 2018, paying their taxes accordingly.

Once the Chilean IRS provides its official view over a specific matter, if taxpayers adhere to the interpretation in good faith, they are protected from any eventual changes in criteria regarding the matter which might be introduced by the Chilean IRS. This would apply even if the IRS's first interpretation turned out to be wrong, and the taxpayer would remain protected until the IRS made another official pronouncement effective for later transactions. This kind of certainty does not exist regarding cryptocurrencies. Therefore, the role of the Chilean IRS here is crucial.

Chilean legislation does not provide any specific regulation for such assets. Certain categories exist, and the tax authority should indicate in which of those categories this kind of asset fits.

In the absence of official pronouncements, based on the general tax rules, tax specialists have theorised and come up with at least three possibilities to consider as regards these types of assets from a tax perspective: (i) As a foreign currency – although this would be difficult to sustain since it has not been yet recognised as a legal currency by any jurisdiction; (ii) As an intangible non-monetary asset; and (iii) As an intangible monetary asset (but not as a currency).

It has been said that the Chilean IRS has been officially requested for its opinion on the matter. In this regard, a local newspaper has recently claimed to have access to what would be the draft of the initial administrative approach for the tax treatment of cryptocurrencies. According to what apparently is a leak as regards a future ruling by the Chilean IRS, the fiscal authority is leaning towards considering the broad concept of 'income' included in the Chilean Income Tax Law. This would mean that any increase in a person's equity produced by cryptocurrencies would be subject to tax, and therefore would have to be recognised and declared to the Chilean IRS.

The same leak suggests that the Chilean IRS would conclude that cryptocurrencies could not be considered as currency since they are not recognised as such in local legislation. Instead, they would be deemed as monetary assets traded among private parties.

This would place the cryptocurrencies, for tax purposes, among assets like cash, bank deposits or credits, as assets that do not protect themselves from inflation. This would mean, at the end of the year no adjustment according to inflation should be made.

The notion of establishing that cryptocurrencies are a monetary asset generates a discussion on whether a taxable result should be recognised at year end. Monetary assets have intrinsic value and, according to specific rules, the change in value of some monetary assets must be recognised at year end, even if there is no alienation of the asset; while for other types of investment, a taxable result would only occur at the time of alienation. There is no clear cut answer in the case of cryptocurrencies, with arguments to be found on both sides.

Regarding income source, this is also an issue that remains to be resolved. For residents in Chile this is not yet so relevant since they are subject to tax on a world source basis. However, non-residents are only subject to tax in Chile on the income that was sourced in this country.

As for VAT, since cryptocurrencies are not corporeal goods, agreements to transfer them should not be subject to such tax.

Notwithstanding the above, it is important to take into consideration that these criteria have not yet been published, thus they have not been confirmed as constituting the official position of the Chilean IRS.

Moreover, to date the authority has not issued any instruction on compliance duties regarding this matter, thus there is still uncertainty regarding the obligations that taxpayers and intermediaries might have.

martinez.jpg
paya.jpg

Gregorio

Martínez

Elizabeth

Paya

Gregorio Martínez (gregorio.martinez@cl.pwc.com) and Elizabeth Paya (elizabeth.paya@cl.pwc.com)

PwC Chile

Website: www.pwc.cl

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

New research, which suggests LLMs can silently corrupt complex documents, should alert tax and legal teams relying on AI to handle iterative drafting and compliance workflows
Maintaining increased funding for HMRC is a ‘high possibility’ if he becomes PM, ITR has also heard
Awards
ITR is delighted to reveal all the shortlisted nominees for the 2026 Europe Tax Awards
The firm has hired a team of private client lawyers from Withers to launch in New York and Connecticut, though ITR analysis suggests it faces stiff competition
The ability of tax authorities to receive and analyse data is becoming ‘quite advanced’, warns Stuart Lang, head of EY’s compliance co-sourcing solution
The Court of Appeal ruling clarifies that treaty benefits are not abusive where transactions are commercially driven, providing greater certainty on “main purpose” anti-avoidance tests
Despite the Netherlands featuring an unusual concentration of World Tax-ranked technology-led providers, sources believe there’s a long way to go to challenge the established players
Ethics seems to be playing a subservient role to an entitlement culture borne out of a pervasive ‘revenue at all costs’ mentality at the big four
Historical World Tax data suggests the ‘largest law firm merger in history’ may not pose a serious threat to the world's leading tax practices
The repeal of Libya’s statute of limitations and tougher enforcement leave taxpayers navigating a high-stakes choice between conciliation and litigation
Gift this article