In the past two years, discussions about tax regulation have been increasing, especially with the introduction of the CARF framework, which has caused many people to start worrying. However, many opinions confuse several important concepts, leading to a flood of misinformation. Today, let's clarify this issue.
First, it is important to understand that CRS and CARF are completely different matters.
CRS is an old framework mainly targeting traditional financial sectors—banks, brokerages, insurance companies. Cryptocurrency exchanges? They are generally outside the scope of CRS. Some have mentioned that CRS 2.0 might expand into the crypto space, but nothing has been finalized yet, and countries are still in negotiations.
CARF is the real tax framework specifically for crypto assets. This framework requires exchanges to report users' transaction data. It sounds quite strict, but there are many details worth paying attention to.
Many articles conflate CRS and CARF, either because the authors haven't fully understood or intentionally create panic.
Second, the compliance pressures faced by major exchanges are not synchronized in time.
A leading exchange, due to its entity being registered in the UAE, has explicitly stated that it will only fully respond to CARF requirements starting from January 2027. Among mainstream large exchanges, this is the latest schedule.
In contrast, exchanges like OKX, Bybit, and Bitget, most of which are based in Seychelles, face tighter compliance timelines—some need to start preparations as early as January 2026. The difference in schedules is quite obvious.
But the most critical question here is: How much will Chinese users actually be affected?
For CARF to truly take effect, there must be an information exchange agreement between the two countries. The user data reported by exchanges needs to be received somewhere; only then can the channels be connected. What is the current situation? China has not yet joined the CARF framework, nor has it signed any crypto information exchange agreements with the countries where these exchanges are registered.
In other words, even if exchanges report data as required, there is no pathway for that data to reach China.
A more realistic point is: which exchange would proactively share user data with a government? This is not aligned with any rational business logic. The survival of exchanges depends on continued operation, and doing such things would be akin to digging their own graves.
Overall, in the short term, the actual risk to Chinese users is almost zero. CRS is of little relevance, and CARF is the key, but China has not joined it for now, and the information flow channels have not been established.
Rather than being driven by various anxieties, it’s better to focus on normal investment decisions. The market changes quickly, and maintaining a stable mindset is even more important.
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CounterIndicator
· 11h ago
Ha, finally someone has clarified this issue. Those articles spreading anxiety before were really annoying.
The metaphor of the exchange digging its own grave is excellent; it hits the point perfectly.
It's another year of being scared, but I have to question the conclusion that the risk is zero.
Not being included in the framework in China is indeed a hard pill to swallow; I've been worried for nothing.
Honestly, it’s just that regulatory authorities haven't decided yet, so let's not overthink it.
People who can't tell CRS from CARF should take a good look.
Haha, 2027, this timetable is just a delaying tactic.
If exchanges dare to act recklessly, they really are tired of living too long.
Instead of worrying, it's better to think about how to make money—that's the real deal.
View OriginalReply0
MEVictim
· 11h ago
Here comes CARF again, and I see most people are scared stiff... Actually, China hasn't entered the game at all, and the data channels haven't even been connected.
View OriginalReply0
IfIWereOnChain
· 11h ago
Chinese users really have nothing to panic about. It's too early to be anxious now.
So many people are scared stiff, but it's really just misinformation. Exchanges voluntarily submitting data in a self-destructive manner? What are they thinking...
The key point is that China hasn't yet joined CARF, and this hurdle is already blocking the way. Don't overthink it.
View OriginalReply0
ForkItAllDay
· 11h ago
Alright, finally someone has clarified this matter. I was annoyed by those chaotic statements before.
Wait, will the exchanges really obediently submit data? That doesn't seem very realistic.
It's the different schedules again, and China not being included in the framework. It feels like this wave of risk has been exaggerated tenfold.
Staying calm is the right mindset. Instead of worrying every day, it's better to study trading strategies more.
Chinese users are indeed quite scared, but it seems to be another false alarm.
Media mixing up CARF and CRS really need to do some catch-up.
The key point is that the information channels haven't been connected; everything else is just paper tigers.
In the past two years, discussions about tax regulation have been increasing, especially with the introduction of the CARF framework, which has caused many people to start worrying. However, many opinions confuse several important concepts, leading to a flood of misinformation. Today, let's clarify this issue.
First, it is important to understand that CRS and CARF are completely different matters.
CRS is an old framework mainly targeting traditional financial sectors—banks, brokerages, insurance companies. Cryptocurrency exchanges? They are generally outside the scope of CRS. Some have mentioned that CRS 2.0 might expand into the crypto space, but nothing has been finalized yet, and countries are still in negotiations.
CARF is the real tax framework specifically for crypto assets. This framework requires exchanges to report users' transaction data. It sounds quite strict, but there are many details worth paying attention to.
Many articles conflate CRS and CARF, either because the authors haven't fully understood or intentionally create panic.
Second, the compliance pressures faced by major exchanges are not synchronized in time.
A leading exchange, due to its entity being registered in the UAE, has explicitly stated that it will only fully respond to CARF requirements starting from January 2027. Among mainstream large exchanges, this is the latest schedule.
In contrast, exchanges like OKX, Bybit, and Bitget, most of which are based in Seychelles, face tighter compliance timelines—some need to start preparations as early as January 2026. The difference in schedules is quite obvious.
But the most critical question here is: How much will Chinese users actually be affected?
For CARF to truly take effect, there must be an information exchange agreement between the two countries. The user data reported by exchanges needs to be received somewhere; only then can the channels be connected. What is the current situation? China has not yet joined the CARF framework, nor has it signed any crypto information exchange agreements with the countries where these exchanges are registered.
In other words, even if exchanges report data as required, there is no pathway for that data to reach China.
A more realistic point is: which exchange would proactively share user data with a government? This is not aligned with any rational business logic. The survival of exchanges depends on continued operation, and doing such things would be akin to digging their own graves.
Overall, in the short term, the actual risk to Chinese users is almost zero. CRS is of little relevance, and CARF is the key, but China has not joined it for now, and the information flow channels have not been established.
Rather than being driven by various anxieties, it’s better to focus on normal investment decisions. The market changes quickly, and maintaining a stable mindset is even more important.