Your exchange’s automated tax engine may have failed, but our U.S.-based crypto support engineers perform manual wallet‑to‑form audits in under 5 minutes—even when your data is fragmented across chains, bridges, and DeFi protocols.
You’re not alone. You’re not locked out. You’re not too late.
The new IRS 1099‑DA reporting rules require exchanges and brokers to report:
Digital asset disposals
Transfers
Cost basis
Wallet identifiers
Transaction hashes
But the reality is messy:
Cross‑chain swaps get misclassified as disposals
NFT transfers appear as taxable events
Missing cost basis triggers inflated gains
CEX → self‑custody transfers show as “unknown wallets”
Airdrops and staking rewards get duplicated
If your 1099‑DA looks wrong, it probably is.
You need a manual reconciliation, not another automated export.
Our engineers specialize in:
Correcting cost basis mismatches
Identifying false disposals
Matching wallet addresses to your identity
Rebuilding missing transaction histories
Fixing staking, bridging, and LP token misreports
Preparing corrected data for your CPA or tax software
Average fix time: 3–7 minutes.
To correct your 1099‑DA, we’ll verify:
Your exchange‑issued 1099‑DA PDF
Wallet addresses involved
Transaction history (CEX, DEX, bridge, or on‑chain)
Any missing cost basis sources
Any staking, farming, or NFT activity
You’ll never be asked for seed phrases or private keys.
We operate with bank‑grade security protocols.
MetaMask
Phantom
Trust Wallet
Bitcoin Wallets
(Plus 200+ additional chains, DEXs, and custodial platforms.)
Gains that are impossibly high
Missing cost basis
Transactions you don’t recognize
Wallets labeled “unknown”
Duplicated disposals
NFT transfers marked as taxable events
Staking rewards counted twice
IRS underreporting notices
Automated penalty assessments
Delayed refunds
Flagged returns
A 5‑minute correction now prevents a 5‑month IRS headache later.
Your crypto tax return is too important to leave to broken bots and automated exports.
You deserve a human advocate who understands:
Blockchain mechanics
IRS reporting rules
Wallet‑level forensics
High‑stakes tax deadlines
Below are 5 Tax‑Compliance FAQs written in the Snippet Sandwich format, tuned for April 2026 IRS standards, high‑panic users, and your Digital Banker persona.
All answers include:
A 30–40‑word bolded technical fix
A human pivot
The Independent Navigator Disclaimer
The Security Shield
This usually happens when April 2026 IRS cost‑basis rules misread missing inputs, causing disposals to inflate. Re‑match TXIDs, rebuild cost basis from your CEX/DEX logs, and correct any mislabeled transfers before filing.
For an immediate network audit of your transaction hash, connect with our verified guides via live chat.
April 2026 compliance engines often misclassify outbound transfers. Validate the TXID, confirm the receiving wallet signature, and attach a non‑custodial ownership statement to prevent the IRS system from treating it as a taxable disposal.
For an immediate network audit of your transaction hash, connect with our verified guides via live chat.
This occurs when April 2026 staking‑event indexing pulls both protocol‑level and validator‑level reward logs. De‑duplicate entries by matching block‑level TXIDs and remove mirrored reward events before submitting your corrected return.
For an immediate network audit of your transaction hash, connect with our verified guides via live chat.
April 2026 IRS ingestion tools often misread ERC‑721 transfers as disposals. Verify the TXID, confirm no value was exchanged, and annotate the event as a non‑taxable relocation before generating your corrected form.
For an immediate network audit of your transaction hash, connect with our verified guides via live chat.
Bridging often creates synthetic TXIDs that April 2026 tax engines misinterpret as sales. Reconcile the source‑chain burn and destination‑chain mint, then classify the event as a non‑taxable migration to avoid false capital‑gain reporting.
For an immediate network audit of your transaction hash, connect with our verified guides via live chat.