Crypto in the Netherlands 2026: Box 3, Peildatum, the Hidden Nuances
Educational material, not tax or financial advice.
In the Netherlands, crypto taxes are framed differently than in many countries: the key point is often not when you sell or what your profit was, but your net wealth (vermogen) on a specific date.
The Dutch system splits income and assets into so-called “boxes” (tax categories). For crypto, the practical fork is usually between Box 3 (wealth: savings and investments) and Box 1 (income from work or business). Which box applies determines how the tax is calculated, what documents matter, and what questions the Belastingdienst may ask.
Is Crypto in the Netherlands Box 3 or Box 1?
Box 3 (sparen en beleggen) is a tax on your assets/wealth: cash on accounts, investments, and other assets (this is where crypto ends up for many private investors). The tax authority looks at the value of your assets on the peildatum (typically 1 January) and applies Box 3 rules based on asset categories. That’s why—even if you traded actively during the year—the snapshot of your portfolio on the reference date often matters most.
Box 1 (inkomen uit werk en woning) covers income from employment and entrepreneurship: salary, self-employment/business income, and situations where crypto activity resembles a professional activity. If you earn from crypto in a structured, ongoing way that looks like a “job” or business, your case can move into Box 1. Here the facts matter: frequency, scale, how organized the activity is, the income sources, and how well you can document them.
Peildatum: Why 1 January Matters
For Box 3, the first anchor is the peildatum—the date on which you record the value of your assets. The Belastingdienst explains the general principle of the peildatum and how assets should be valued.
Even if you traded throughout the year, Box 3 often comes back to the same question: what did you own on the peildatum, and what was it worth?
Which Box 3 Category Does Crypto Fall Into?
Within Box 3, assets are grouped into categories (bank balances, investments, etc.). For private individuals, crypto is typically treated as part of investments/other assets, and the tax logic follows the “category → calculation” structure (using deemed returns by category).
The exact percentages and parameters can change from year to year, so for 2026 you should check the current figures published by the Belastingdienst. The structure, however, remains the same: asset category → Box 3 calculation.
How to Value Crypto on the Peildatum
Use the market value on the peildatum, fixed in euros, with a clear price source.
- If the assets are on a CEX: use the exchange price (or an official statement/report if the exchange provides it).
- If the assets are in a self-custody wallet: use a major price aggregator/price feed and save a screenshot/export as evidence.
- If you hold many tokens: create a single “portfolio snapshot” (holdings + prices) for the same date and save the file/screenshot.
Banks and compliance teams usually prefer it when you can explain the chain cleanly: “here is the account/address, here is the balance, here is the price source, here is the EUR value.”
What Documents to Prepare
- exchange exports for deposits/withdrawals (CSV/statement);
- a list of wallets/addresses;
- TX hashes / explorer links for large movements;
- on/off-ramp evidence: SEPA transfers, bank statements, payment references;
- if you received airdrops/referrals/yield rewards, keep a separate file with dates and amounts.
FAQ
Do I need to declare crypto if it’s on a hardware/cold wallet?
If you own the assets and they exist on the peildatum, the logic is typically the same: it is part of your wealth (Box 3). The key is valuation and evidence.
Can I use an approximate price?
It’s safer to record a specific source (exchange/aggregator) and keep proof. Consistency matters: use one method everywhere.
Conclusion
For 2026 in the Netherlands, the practical way to stay calm is to treat crypto as part of your Box 3 wealth: take a snapshot on the peildatum, value it carefully in EUR, and keep clean exports from exchanges and wallets. That reduces friction with banks/compliance and saves time if you ever need to explain the origin of funds.