Our Expert in Estonia
No results available
Since 1 January 2026, every crypto-asset service provider (CASP) operating in or through Estonia faces a new layer of mandatory crypto tax reporting under the EU’s DAC8 directive. Estonia’s Tax and Customs Board (EMTA) has published detailed guidance confirming that service providers must submit annual data reports to the ETCB for the first time in 2027, covering all reportable transactions conducted during the 2026 calendar year. This guide walks compliance officers, CFOs and general counsels through the exact data fields EMTA requires, the operational steps to collect and validate that data, the filing deadlines, and the penalty risks that come with non-compliance.
Whether you operate a centralised exchange, a custodial wallet service or an OTC brokerage desk licensed in Estonia, the obligations are concrete and the clock is already running.
This practitioner-level guide delivers four core resources for teams responsible for crypto tax reporting in Estonia under DAC8:
The guide also addresses penalty exposure, GDPR considerations for cross-border data sharing, and the intersection between AML/KYC processes and DAC8 due diligence. For practitioners operating within the broader blockchain legal practice area, this article serves as the Estonia-specific implementation reference.
DAC8, formally an amendment to EU Directive 2011/16/EU on Administrative Cooperation, entered into force on 1 January 2026, expanding the EU’s tax transparency framework to cover crypto-asset transactions for the first time. According to the European Commission, DAC8 rules require Reporting Crypto-Asset Service Providers to begin collecting and reporting transaction data and client information to their national tax authority, which then automatically exchanges that data with other EU member states.
DAC8 targets entities defined as “Reporting Crypto-Asset Service Providers” (RCASPs). As confirmed by the European Commission’s DAC8 guidance, this includes centralised exchanges, custodial wallet providers, brokers facilitating crypto-to-crypto or crypto-to-fiat transactions, and any entity providing transfer or safekeeping services for crypto-assets on behalf of clients. The scope captures both EU-domiciled entities and non-EU providers that serve EU-resident users, if your platform onboards Estonian tax residents, you are likely in scope regardless of where your legal entity is registered.
The reportable transactions under DAC8 encompass exchanges of crypto-assets for fiat currency, exchanges of one crypto-asset for another, transfers of crypto-assets (including wallet-to-wallet movements facilitated by the CASP), and retail payment transactions settled in crypto-assets.
DAC8 imposes four interlocking obligations on every Reporting CASP:
Estonia transposed DAC8 into national law ahead of the 1 January 2026 effective date. The Estonian Tax and Customs Board (EMTA), referred to in Estonian as Maksu- ja Tolliamet, is the competent authority that receives, processes and exchanges crypto-asset data with other EU tax administrations. For any CASP operating within Estonia’s legal jurisdiction, EMTA is the single point of submission.
EMTA’s published guidance confirms that service providers must submit annual data reports to the ETCB for the first time in January 2027 for the data of 2026. The KPMG Estonia bulletin corroborates this timeline, noting that the data report for 2026 must be submitted by June 2027. Industry observers expect this window, January through June 2027, to represent the submission period, with EMTA likely publishing the precise opening date and format requirements through its e-services environment (e‑MTA).
| Data Year | Submission Window | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 (first cycle) | January – June 2027 | First-ever DAC8 filing; EMTA expects electronic submission via e‑MTA |
| 2027 | January – June 2028 | Annual cycle continues; any template revisions will be published by EMTA in advance |
| 2028+ | January – June of the following year | Ongoing annual obligation; retain data for minimum retention period |
The reporting obligation falls on any CASP that is registered, licensed or otherwise legally established in Estonia, including entities holding a licence from the Estonian Financial Supervision Authority (FSA) under the Crypto Asset Market Act (CMA), which supplements MiCA at the national level. Estonia now regulates crypto under a dual framework: MiCA sets common EU rules, while the CMA elaborates and supplements MiCA domestically, and the FSA is the sole licensing and supervisory body for CASPs.
Cross-border CASPs that are not established in Estonia but that provide services to Estonian tax residents may also fall within scope if they are registered as Reporting CASPs in another EU member state, in that case, the CASP reports to its home member state’s tax authority, and that authority exchanges data with EMTA automatically. However, CASPs registered in Estonia bear a direct obligation to EMTA. Those exploring crypto compliance in Estonia should map their group entity structure to identify which legal entity carries the primary reporting duty.
The core of crypto tax reporting in Estonia lies in understanding exactly which data fields EMTA requires. The DAC8 framework prescribes a standardised set of data elements that every Reporting CASP must compile, and EMTA’s implementation follows this schema closely. Reports are submitted electronically through the e‑MTA environment.
The following table maps the key data fields, their DAC8 equivalents, sample values and essential validation rules:
| EMTA Data Field | DAC8 Field Name | Sample Value / Validation Rule |
|---|---|---|
| User full legal name | Name of the Reportable User | Text string; must match self-certification exactly |
| User address | Address of the Reportable User | Structured format: street, city, postcode, country code (ISO 3166-1 alpha-2) |
| Tax residence jurisdiction(s) | Jurisdiction(s) of Residence | ISO country code(s); at least one required |
| TIN (Taxpayer Identification Number) | TIN for each Jurisdiction of Residence | Alphanumeric; format must match issuing jurisdiction’s TIN structure |
| Date of birth (individuals) | Date of Birth | YYYY-MM-DD; required for individual users |
| Entity registration number (entities) | Entity Identification Number | Business registry code; required for legal entity users |
| Crypto-asset type | Type of Crypto-Asset | Standardised identifier (e.g., BTC, ETH); use CASP internal taxonomy mapped to EMTA accepted list |
| Transaction type | Type of Transaction | Exchange (crypto-fiat), Exchange (crypto-crypto), Transfer, Payment |
| Transaction amount | Aggregate Value of Transactions | Numeric; expressed in EUR using exchange rate at time of transaction |
| Number of transactions | Number of Units | Integer count per transaction type per reporting period |
| Wallet address (where applicable) | Distributed Ledger Address | Full on-chain address; required for transfers |
| Transaction date | Date of Transaction | YYYY-MM-DD; must fall within the reporting period |
DAC8 requires every Reporting CASP to obtain a self-certification from each crypto-asset user. This is not optional and must be collected at onboarding for new users, or within the due diligence remediation window for pre-existing accounts. A compliant self-certification must contain, at minimum:
CASPs should integrate self-certification collection into their existing onboarding workflow. Where a user refuses to provide a self-certification or provides one that is obviously incomplete, DAC8 requires the CASP to apply the “indicia” test, reviewing available address, document and transaction data to determine likely tax residence, and report accordingly.
TIN collection remains one of the most operationally challenging elements of crypto tax reporting in Estonia and across the EU. Crypto-native users who have never interacted with traditional financial institutions may not know their TIN or may resist providing it. CASPs should consider the following mitigations:
Translating regulatory requirements into a working data pipeline requires a structured operational approach. The following 10-step playbook covers the full cycle of CASP tax reporting, from entity mapping through to annual file submission.
The following sample illustrates how transaction data might be structured for EMTA submission. Column headers map directly to the EMTA field mapping table above:
| UserName | TaxResidence | TIN | AssetType | TransactionType | AmountEUR | TransactionDate | WalletAddress |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jaan Tamm | EE | 37001010001 | BTC | Exchange (crypto-fiat) | 12,500.00 | 2026-03-15 | , |
| Maria Kask | DE | 65 123 456 789 | ETH | Transfer | 3,200.00 | 2026-07-22 | 0x1aB2…cD3e |
| SaaS Platforms OÜ | EE | 12345678 | USDC | Exchange (crypto-crypto) | 45,000.00 | 2026-11-08 | , |
Not every entity in the crypto ecosystem reports the same data. The table below summarises reporting obligations by entity type, a critical distinction for group-level compliance planning.
| Entity Type | Who Reports? | Typical Data Fields & Special Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Centralised exchange (domestic) | The Estonian-registered exchange entity (OÜ or AS) | Full customer identity, TIN, all transaction types (crypto-fiat, crypto-crypto), aggregate EUR values, number of transactions per type per user. Primary reporting entity at group level. |
| Custodial wallet provider | The wallet service provider entity | Customer identity, TIN, wallet-to-wallet transfers facilitated through custody, receipt and withdrawal records, aggregate values. Must report transfers even where no exchange occurs. |
| Broker / OTC desk | The broker entity (or the entity facilitating the trade) | Trade counterparty information, settlement records, negotiated prices converted to EUR, aggregate volumes. Where the broker matches buyers and sellers without holding assets, reporting still applies to facilitated transactions. |
| Cross-border CASP (non-EE registered) | Reports to home member state tax authority | Same field set. Data on Estonian tax-resident users is exchanged with EMTA automatically. No direct filing with EMTA unless registered in Estonia. |
Where a group operates multiple entity types under a single corporate umbrella, the reporting obligation attaches to each licensed entity individually. A group-level consolidation is not permitted, each CASP entity files its own report with EMTA.
Estonian law empowers EMTA to impose administrative penalties for late filing, incomplete submissions and failure to implement required due diligence procedures. Following Estonia’s public announcement that cryptocurrency services are now required to make tax authority declarations, industry observers expect enforcement to intensify as the first reporting cycle approaches. The practical risks include financial penalties, enhanced supervisory scrutiny from the FSA, and reputational damage in a jurisdiction where crypto tax transparency is increasingly a licensing condition.
CASPs that fail to file by the submission deadline or that submit data with material errors face the prospect of correction requests, supplemental reporting requirements and, in persistent non-compliance scenarios, referral to the FSA for potential licence review.
Collecting, storing and transmitting personal data, names, TINs, transaction histories and wallet addresses, engages the GDPR. CASPs must establish a clear lawful basis for processing this data for tax reporting purposes. In most cases, the appropriate basis is compliance with a legal obligation (Article 6(1)(c) GDPR), since DAC8 and its Estonian transposition mandate the collection and submission of this data.
Key GDPR compliance steps include:
Many of the data elements required for DAC8 reporting overlap with AML/KYC data that CASPs already collect under Estonia’s Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Prevention Act. Customer identity, address, date of birth and national ID numbers are standard KYC fields. However, the legal basis for AML data collection (prevention of money laundering) differs from the legal basis for DAC8 collection (tax reporting). CASPs should not simply re-purpose AML databases for tax reporting without documenting a separate lawful basis under GDPR for each processing purpose.
The following phased timeline provides a practical roadmap from the current date through to the first EMTA submission:
Verify that your systems can export the data fields required for DAC8 crypto reporting to the Estonian Tax and Customs Board (EMTA) before the reporting deadline.
DAC8 crypto tax reporting in Estonia is no longer a future obligation, it is an active compliance requirement with concrete data collection, validation and submission deadlines. CASPs, exchanges and custodial wallet providers that delay implementation risk filing incomplete reports, triggering EMTA enforcement actions and exposing their licence status to supervisory review. Early indications suggest that EMTA will apply its standard enforcement approach from the first reporting cycle, leaving little room for grace periods. A thorough legal review of your entity structure, data pipeline and GDPR compliance posture is essential before the 2027 filing window opens.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Yuliya Barabash at SBSB Fintech Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 15 minutes ago
posted 38 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 11 hours ago
posted 11 hours ago
posted 12 hours ago
posted 12 hours ago
posted 13 hours ago
posted 13 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message