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liquid-staking-and-the-restaking-revolution
Blog

Why Pass-Through Taxation for Staking Rewards Is a Legal Fiction

A technical and legal deconstruction of why treating staking rewards as partnership income is a flawed analogy, focusing on the absence of legal rights and control for token holders in protocols like Lido and EigenLayer.

introduction
THE LEGAL FICTION

Introduction

The IRS's pass-through taxation model for staking rewards is a flawed legal construct that ignores the technical reality of network participation.

Pass-through taxation is a legal fiction. The IRS treats staking rewards as immediate income, but this model fails because the validator's work creates the asset. This is not passive receipt like a dividend from Coinbase or Kraken; it is active creation.

The technical process contradicts the tax event. A validator's reward is a new, native unit of the protocol (e.g., ETH, SOL) minted by the network itself. The taxable moment is an accounting abstraction imposed on a continuous, non-discretionary cryptographic process.

This creates a liquidity trap. Protocols like Lido and Rocket Pool abstract staking, but the tax liability hits before the user can sell the asset to pay it. This forces a sell-down of principal, punishing long-term network security.

thesis-statement
THE LEGAL FICTION

The Core Argument

The IRS's pass-through tax treatment for staking rewards is a flawed legal construct that ignores the technical reality of on-chain state creation.

Staking creates new property. The IRS's 2024 Revenue Ruling treats staking rewards as income when 'controlled', but this misapplies traditional tax principles. On-chain, a validator's computational work directly mints new tokens, an act of creation distinct from receiving a dividend or payment from a counterparty.

The 'Control' test is incoherent. The IRS fixates on the validator's ability to transfer the new tokens, but this is a function of blockchain protocol rules, not a taxable event. This logic would make a miner taxable upon finding a Bitcoin block, not when they sell it—a position the IRS has never formally taken.

Contrast with Proof-of-Work. The IRS's own 2014 guidance for Bitcoin mining treats mined coins as property upon creation, with income measured by fair market value at receipt. Applying a different standard to Proof-of-Stake validators creates an arbitrary distinction where the economic substance—generating new network assets—is identical.

Evidence: The Jarrett v. United States case highlights this flaw. The plaintiffs argued staking rewards are not income until disposition, akin to mining. The IRS's settlement, while not a precedent, reveals the legal vulnerability of treating newly created digital assets as immediate income under current code.

TAX TREATMENT

Partnership vs. Staking: A Legal Feature Matrix

Comparing the legal and tax characteristics of traditional partnership structures versus the pass-through taxation model commonly applied to staking rewards.

Legal Feature / Tax AttributeGeneral Partnership (IRC Subchapter K)Staking Rewards (Pass-Through Fiction)Corporate Taxation (C-Corp)

Formal Agreement Required

Profit & Loss Allocation Defined

Centralized Management & Control

Unilateral Reward Distribution

K-1 Schedule Issuance

Basis Tracking for Participants

Defined by capital account

Notional, user-tracked

N/A (shareholder level)

Liability Exposure for Participants

Joint & Several

Typically None

Limited

Tax Event on Reward Receipt

deep-dive
THE LEGAL REALITY

Deconstructing the Fiction: Rights, Control, and Liability

The IRS's pass-through taxation model for staking rewards is a legal fiction that contradicts the technical and economic reality of decentralized protocols.

The IRS's pass-through fiction treats stakers as direct recipients of newly minted tokens. This ignores the decentralized protocol's control; validators on networks like Ethereum or Solana are algorithmically selected, and rewards are a function of code, not a partnership distribution.

Stakers lack fundamental ownership rights until rewards are claimed. Unlike an S-Corp dividend, a user cannot direct, sell, or access unclaimed staking rewards on Lido or Rocket Pool without triggering a withdrawal, which is a separate taxable event.

This creates a liability mismatch. The fiction imposes tax on income the taxpayer does not control, a principle rejected in Cesarini for found property. The DAO treasury or protocol controls the asset, not the individual staker.

Evidence: The 2022 Jarrett case argued this exact point, highlighting that staking rewards on the Tezos blockchain are newly created property, not income derived from a passthrough entity. The IRS settled, avoiding a precedent.

counter-argument
THE LEGAL FICTION

Steelman: The Economic Substance Argument

The IRS's pass-through taxation of staking rewards ignores the fundamental economic reality of the validator's role.

Pass-through taxation is a legal fiction that misapplies partnership rules to a fundamentally different activity. The IRS treats staking pools like Lido or Rocket Pool as pass-through entities, where rewards are taxable income upon creation. This ignores that validators perform a service, not a partnership, creating a new asset for the network, not a distributive share of profit.

The economic substance is service provision. A validator's block production and attestation duties are a real-time service for the network, akin to AWS providing compute. The newly minted ETH or SOL is the network's payment for this service, constituting a barter transaction where income is realized upon sale, not creation. This aligns with the IRS's own treatment of mined crypto.

This creates a perverse incentive against network security. Taxing unrealized rewards forces validators to sell a portion of their stake to cover tax liabilities, directly reducing their skin in the game and network alignment. Protocols like Ethereum and Solana rely on this alignment; the IRS's position actively undermines the security model it purports to tax.

Evidence: The Jarrett v. United States case hinges on this distinction. The taxpayers argued staking rewards are newly created property, with income realized upon disposition. The IRS's counter-argument relies on a flawed analogy to traditional finance, failing the economic substance test for a 21st-century network service.

case-study
WHY THE IRS'S LOGIC DOESN'T HOLD

Case Studies in Legal Fiction

The IRS's 2024 Revenue Ruling 2024-5 treats staking rewards as income upon receipt, a flawed legal fiction that misapplies tax principles to a novel technological process.

01

The Problem: Constructive Receipt vs. Illusory Control

The IRS applies the constructive receipt doctrine, arguing a staker has control over newly minted tokens. This ignores the technological reality of slashing and bonding periods.\n- Control is contingent: Tokens are not liquid or usable until after an unbonding period (e.g., 21 days on Ethereum).\n- Value is unrealized: The reward is a probabilistic future claim, not a present economic benefit, akin to an unvested stock option.

21 days
Unbonding Period
0%
Initial Liquidity
02

The Solution: The Dominion & Control Test from *Cesarini*

The seminal tax case Cesarini v. United States established that income requires complete dominion and control. Staking rewards fail this test at creation.\n- Precedent for delay: Finding cash in a piano was income because it was immediately spendable. Staking rewards are not.\n- True taxable event: Taxation should occur upon vesting or sale, aligning with the realization principle and matching cash flow for taxpayers.

1969
Cesarini Ruling
Key Test
Dominion & Control
03

The Precedent: *Jarrett v. United States* (2023)

The only court case on this issue rejected the IRS's position, creating a direct circuit split with the Revenue Ruling.\n- Tennessee Court Ruling: Found staking rewards are created property, not income, until sold.\n- Legal Fiction Exposed: The court highlighted the absurdity of taxing non-liquid, self-created assets, comparing it to taxing a homeowner for the imputed rental value of their own home.

1-0
Court vs. IRS
Created Property
Legal Classification
takeaways
THE LEGAL FICTION

TL;DR for Protocol Architects and VCs

The IRS's 'pass-through' model for staking rewards is a flawed legal construct that misrepresents blockchain economics and creates systemic risk for protocols.

01

The Problem: The IRS's Flawed Analogy

The IRS treats staking rewards as income from a pass-through entity, like a partnership. This is a legal fiction that ignores the cryptographic reality of block production.

  • False Equivalence: A validator is not a partnership; it's a deterministic state machine.
  • Tax Event Mismatch: Creates phantom income at block proposal, not at token transfer or sale.
  • Protocol Risk: Forces protocols to design for tax compliance, not optimal cryptoeconomics.
100%
Fictional
~0
Legal Precedent
02

The Solution: Cost-Basis Attribution

The only technically coherent model is to treat newly minted tokens as having a zero-cost basis at creation, with tax liability triggered upon disposition (sale, swap, use).

  • Technical Truth: Aligns with how blockchains actually record value creation.
  • Liquidity Focus: Tax is due when stakers realize fiat-equivalent value, solving the illiquidity problem.
  • Protocol Design Freedom: Enables innovative reward mechanisms (e.g., restaking, liquid staking tokens) without creating tax landmines.
Zero
Basis at Mint
Disposition
Tax Event
03

The Precedent: Jarrett v. United States

This ongoing case challenges the pass-through model, arguing staking rewards are newly created property, not income. A favorable ruling would be a seismic shift.

  • Legal Attack Vector: Directly targets the core 'income' classification.
  • VC Implication: Changes the risk calculus for any protocol with inflationary rewards (e.g., Ethereum, Solana, Cosmos).
  • Strategic Playbook: Protocols must prepare legal arguments and model economics under both tax regimes.
1 Case
To Rule Them All
$10B+
Staked Value At Stake
04

The Protocol Architect's Mandate

Design with the assumption that pass-through taxation will fail. Build systems that are resilient to a cost-basis tax regime.

  • LST-First Design: Liquid Staking Tokens (LSTs) like Lido's stETH naturally defer tax until sale.
  • Reward Streaming: Implement continuous vesting or reward claims to avoid large, lump-sum 'income' events.
  • Documentation Layer: Build transparent, on-chain reporting tools for cost-basis tracking, anticipating future regulatory demands.
LSTs
Key Primitive
On-Chain
Reporting Layer
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Pass-Through Taxation for Staking Is a Legal Fiction | ChainScore Blog