Serving San Jose, CA Crypto Investors Remotely

Crypto Tax CPA
in San Jose

Licensed Help for Crypto Investors in San Jose, CA , Remote, Federal, All 50 States

By Garrett Taylor, CPA #133092 (California, federally authorized)
Reviewed by Leanne Grant, Enrolled Agent · Updated: May 2026
Phone: (858) 434-7547
Call (858) 434-7547

Most clients book a 30-minute call within 24 hours.

Licensed CPA#133092
EA ReviewerLeanne Grant
ServingSan Jose, CA Remotely
Crypto tax CPA serving San Jose investors remotely
Key Facts

Key Facts About Crypto Taxes in San Jose

  • San Jose residents face a combined top long-term capital gains rate of 37.1% (federal 23.8% + California 13.3%).
  • California taxes long-term capital gains as ordinary income, no preferential state rate.
  • San Jose's primary industries include Semiconductors, Software, Hardware, professionals in these fields are among the most active crypto investors.
  • IRS Notice 2014-21, Rev. Rul. 2019-24, and TD 10000 define the federal crypto tax framework that applies to all San Jose residents.
  • A CPA licensed in any U.S. state can legally prepare federal crypto tax returns for San Jose residents. Garrett Taylor, CPA #133092 (California), serves San Jose clients remotely.
Why San Jose

Why San Jose Crypto Investors Need a Specialist

San Jose is the heart of Silicon Valley and the highest concentration of tech wealth per capita. Apple, Google, and NVIDIA employees hold billions in combined crypto, Silicon Valley's early-adopter culture means many engineers have cost bases from the earliest days of Bitcoin and Ethereum. With a combined top long-term capital gains rate of 37.1%, crypto investors here need a CPA who understands both the IRS rules and the California tax landscape. COS Elite provides remote crypto tax preparation for San Jose residents, with federal returns prepared by Garrett Taylor, CPA #133092.

San Jose crypto investors need a specialist because the combined tax burden demands precision. At a 37.1% combined long-term capital gains rate and 50.3% on ordinary income, every misclassified transaction, every missed cost-basis adjustment, and every unreported DeFi event costs more here than in most of the country.

The complexity starts with the rate itself. California taxes all capital gains as ordinary income at up to 13.3%, Silicon Valley's highest earners face the full rate on every dollar of crypto gains. This means the difference between short-term and long-term treatment is amplified, proper holding-period management is essential. Converting a $100,000 short-term gain to long-term treatment saves 132 cents on every dollar at the combined rate.

Beyond the rate, San Jose's economy creates specific crypto tax challenges. Apple, Google, and NVIDIA employees hold billions in combined crypto, Silicon Valley's early-adopter culture means many engineers have cost bases from the earliest days of Bitcoin and Ethereum. These investors face scenarios that generic tax software cannot handle: token compensation vesting schedules, cross-chain DeFi reconciliation, NFT royalty income, and the interaction between traditional equity compensation (RSUs, ISOs) and crypto positions. Each of these requires manual review by a CPA who understands both the IRS crypto rules and the local tax landscape.

DeFi activity is particularly consequential for San Jose investors. Liquidity pool entries, yield harvests, governance votes with token rewards, and cross-chain bridge transactions each create taxable events. Under Rev. Proc. 2024-28, the IRS provided updated guidance on digital asset reporting, but many DeFi scenarios remain in a gray area that requires professional judgment. At San Jose's combined rates, getting these classifications wrong is expensive.

The IRS has steadily increased crypto enforcement. TD 10000 (the digital asset broker reporting rule), the Form 1040 digital asset question, and exchange-issued 1099s mean the era of quiet non-reporting is over. For San Jose residents, California FTB audits Silicon Valley taxpayers at elevated rates due to the concentration of high-income returns adds another layer of compliance risk.

COS Elite serves San Jose crypto investors remotely. Garrett Taylor, CPA #133092, is a California-licensed CPA authorized to prepare federal returns for clients in all 50 states. As a California-licensed CPA, Garrett handles both federal and state returns directly. We handle the full cycle, reconciliation, cost-basis optimization, return preparation, and filing, with complete workpapers documenting every position.
San Jose skyline representing crypto tax services
San Jose Tax Reality

State + Local Tax Reality in San Jose

CategoryDetails
State Income TaxYes
State Top Rate13.3%
City / Local TaxNone
Combined Top LTCG Rate37.1%
Combined Top Ordinary Rate50.3%
Rate BreakdownFederal 23.8% LTCG (incl. 3.8% NIIT) + California 13.3% = 37.1% combined top LTCG rate. For ordinary income: 37% federal + 13.3% state = 50.3%.
San Jose residents face a meaningful combined tax burden on crypto gains. Here is the rate structure at the top bracket:

**Long-term capital gains (held >1 year):**
- Federal LTCG: 20%
- Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT): 3.8%
- California: 13.3%
- **Combined: 37.1%**

**Short-term gains / ordinary income (DeFi yield, staking, mining):**
- Federal ordinary: 37%
- California: 13.3%
- **Combined: 50.3%**

California taxes all capital gains as ordinary income at up to 13.3%, Silicon Valley's highest earners face the full rate on every dollar of crypto gains. California conforms to federal tax treatment on a rolling basis. IRS Notice 2014-21, Rev. Rul. 2019-24, and the digital asset reporting requirements under TD 10000 all apply at the state level. Critically, California does not distinguish between short-term and long-term gains at the state level, both are taxed as ordinary income at 13.3%.

For crypto investors, this means every taxable event, every trade, every swap, every DeFi yield harvest, every airdrop, faces the combined rate stack. The cost of missing transactions or misclassifying events is multiplied by the state rate on top of the federal rate. A single misclassified $50,000 gain could cost an additional 6650 in unnecessary state tax.

The holding-period distinction is particularly important for San Jose residents. The spread between short-term and long-term treatment at the federal level is up to 13.2 percentage points (37% ordinary vs. 23.8% LTCG). However, California provides no additional benefit for long-term holding, the state rate is the same regardless of holding period.

the AMT interaction between ISO exercises and crypto gains is a critical planning issue for Silicon Valley tech workers, a poorly timed ISO exercise in a large crypto gain year can create six-figure phantom tax bills. This is a critical planning consideration that can save San Jose crypto investors substantial sums with proper structuring.
Tax rate information for San Jose crypto investors
Common Issues

Common Crypto Tax Issues We See in San Jose

Remote crypto tax preparation for San Jose clients

Apple, Google, and NVIDIA employees with massive RSU positions alongside crypto creating concentrated tax years

VC-backed founders with token SAFT agreements and uncertain fair market values at vesting

Incentive stock option exercises triggering AMT in the same year as crypto gain realization

Silicon Valley engineers with early Bitcoin and Ethereum positions from 2013-2017 with undocumented cost basis

International tech workers on H-1B visas with cross-border crypto holdings and dual-country tax obligations

### Apple, Google, and NVIDIA employees with massive RSU positions alongside crypto creating concentrated tax years
This is the most common challenge we see among San Jose crypto clients. The complexity of tracking every transaction across multiple exchanges, wallets, and DeFi protocols is amplified by California's 13.3% rate. Many investors have used five or more exchanges over the years, some of which have shut down or stopped providing historical data. We reconcile the full on-chain history using blockchain explorers, exchange APIs, and CSV imports to reconstruct cost basis and ensure every position is accurately documented on Form 8949.

### VC-backed founders with token SAFT agreements and uncertain fair market values at vesting
San Jose's the heart of Silicon Valley and the highest concentration of tech wealth per capita economy creates unique scenarios that generic tax software cannot handle. Apple, Google, and NVIDIA employees hold billions in combined crypto, Silicon Valley's early-adopter culture means many engineers have cost bases from the earliest days of Bitcoin and Ethereum. These situations require a CPA who understands both the IRS crypto rules (Notice 2014-21, Rev. Rul. 2019-24) and the specific dynamics of the San Jose market. We see patterns here that are distinct from other cities, and we prepare for the specific audit triggers that California's tax authority tends to focus on in this market.

### Incentive stock option exercises triggering AMT in the same year as crypto gain realization
This issue affects a growing number of San Jose residents. Under Rev. Rul. 2019-24 and IRS Notice 2014-21, the classification of each crypto event determines whether it is reported as ordinary income or capital gain, and the difference at San Jose's combined rates can be thousands of dollars per transaction. Misclassification is the #2 most common error we find when reviewing prior-year returns. DeFi events are particularly prone to misclassification because the IRS has not issued transaction-level guidance for many protocol types.

### Silicon Valley engineers with early Bitcoin and Ethereum positions from 2013-2017 with undocumented cost basis
We see this frequently with San Jose clients. The interaction between traditional income sources and crypto gains affects AGI thresholds, NIIT calculations, Medicare surtax triggers, and bracket management. For example, a large crypto gain in the same year as RSU vesting or bonus income can push the taxpayer above NIIT thresholds, creating an additional 3.8% tax on investment income that would not have applied with better timing. A comprehensive approach that considers the full tax picture, not just the crypto side, is essential for minimizing total tax liability.

### International tech workers on H-1B visas with cross-border crypto holdings and dual-country tax obligations
This is an increasingly important consideration for San Jose crypto investors. The IRS has signaled that enforcement in this area is intensifying under TD 10000 (digital asset broker reporting), expanded Form 1099-DA reporting, and the mandatory digital asset question on Form 1040. Revenue Procedure 2024-28 provides additional reporting guidance. Proactive compliance is far less expensive than responding to a CP2000 notice or a full audit after the fact. We help clients get ahead of the enforcement curve with accurate, well-documented returns.
Our Process

Our Process for San Jose Clients

Our remote engagement works seamlessly from anywhere in the San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara MSA area. Four steps, start to finish.

Step 01

Onboard

You book a free 30-minute call. We review your situation, exchanges, wallets, and DeFi activity. You get a fixed-fee quote before committing.

Step 02

Reconcile

We pull your full on-chain history, map every transaction to its tax treatment, and reconstruct cost basis across all chains and wallets.

Step 03

Review

Garrett prepares your return. Leanne Grant, Enrolled Agent, reviews for accuracy. Every position is documented, every basis adjustment explained.

Step 04

File

Your federal return is filed electronically. State returns are coordinated as needed. You get a complete copy of all workpapers for your records.

Our process for San Jose clients follows four steps:

**Step 1, Onboard.** Book a free 30-minute call at (858) 434-7547 or through our [contact page](/contact). We review your exchanges, wallets, DeFi protocols, and overall tax situation. You receive a fixed-fee quote before committing to anything.

**Step 2, Reconcile.** We pull your full on-chain history across every chain and wallet you have used. Every transaction is mapped to its correct tax treatment: capital gain, ordinary income, non-taxable transfer, or other. Cost basis is reconstructed using the method that minimizes your combined federal + state tax burden.

**Step 3, Review.** Garrett Taylor, CPA #133092, prepares your federal return. Leanne Grant, Enrolled Agent, reviews every return for accuracy and compliance. Your California state return is prepared directly by Garrett (California-licensed). Every position is documented with supporting workpapers.

**Step 4, File.** Your federal return is filed electronically. State returns are filed as needed. You receive complete copies of all forms, a transaction-level summary, and workpapers for your records. The entire process is handled remotely, no office visit required.
Pricing

Pricing & Engagement

Strategy
$499

Initial Deep Dive

Comprehensive review of your crypto activity, tax position, and strategy options. Fixed fee, no surprises.

Tax Preparation
From $1,500

Individual Return

Full federal tax return preparation with crypto reconciliation. Scales with complexity. Fixed fee quoted after initial call. California state filings coordinated as needed.

Complex
From $3,000

Multi-Entity / Complex

For clients with LLCs, trusts, multiple entities, or high-volume trading. Includes full entity-level reconciliation and consolidated reporting.

Advisory
From $500/mo

Advisory Retainer

Ongoing tax planning, transaction-level guidance, and quarterly estimated tax support. Ideal for active traders and DeFi participants.

All fees are quoted in writing before you commit. We accept cryptocurrency payments via Coinbase Business. State-level California filings are coordinated with state-licensed practitioners as needed.

Get Started Today

San Jose crypto investors face a combined top long-term capital gains rate of 37.1%. Every missed cost-basis adjustment and every misclassified transaction costs more here than in most of the country. Book a free 30-minute call with Garrett Taylor, CPA #133092, or call (858) 434-7547. We serve San Jose residents remotely, same rigor, no office visit required.
(858) 434-7547
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

San Jose residents face a combined top long-term capital gains rate of 37.1%. California taxes all capital gains as ordinary income at up to 13.3%, Silicon Valley's highest earners face the full rate on every dollar of crypto gains. Short-term gains and DeFi income are taxed as ordinary income at up to 50.3% combined. Proper cost-basis optimization and holding-period management can significantly reduce your effective rate.

Have a question that isn't here?

Ready to Get Your Crypto Taxes Done Right?

Book a free 30-minute call with Garrett or call us directly. We serve San Jose, CA residents remotely.

Call (858) 434-7547
Nearby Cities

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