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Illinois Targets Bitcoin Transactions With New Tax Critics Call ‘Punitive’ - Crypto Economy
TL;DR:
Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker signed the state budget package for fiscal year 2027 last Tuesday, officializing a new Bitcoin transaction tax and other cryptocurrencies. The measure makes the region one of the first jurisdictions in the United States to implement a direct tax rate on the daily movements of virtual assets by its citizens.
Technical Scope of the Digital Asset Tax Act

The so-called “Digital Asset Tax Act” will apply a 0.2% charge on all cryptocurrency activity executed physically within the state or by individuals whose primary place of use is registered in Illinois. Project data reveals that the tax obligation will fall directly on intermediaries. Cryptocurrency brokers and exchanges operating in the area must act as withholding agents, segregating said percentage on each purchase or transfer carried out.
For their part, private sector groups expressed immediate rejection of the operational implications of the regulation. According to a report by the Crypto Council for Innovation (CCI), the data suggests that Illinois will position itself as the only state to financially punish users for receiving transactions of this type. Additionally, documentation from said entity qualifies the law as the most severe tax framework in the country against the digital economy.
The dissatisfaction of industry advocates also lies in the technical ways in which the legislative debate was processed in recent months**.** CCI spokespersons indicated that the affected parties did not have formal opportunities to offer comments or modifications to the original proposal before its definitive incorporation into the state budget.
The National Scenario Amid Regulatory Pressure
At the federal level, the U.S. Congress introduced a set of seven bills focused on the taxation of digital assets in early June 2026. These federal proposals seek to establish minimum exemptions (de minimis) and provide clear parameters on taxes applied to technical activities such as mining and staking. However, the initiatives face explicit resistance in House committee hearings.
Unlike the federal approach oriented toward the exemption of minor transactions, the Illinois legislation taxes every operation regardless of volume. Projections issued by the Illinois Policy Institute indicate that the state government is confident in capturing a substantial flow of new current revenues to finance the fiscal year. However, global exchange firms based outside Illinois that invoice more than $100,000 annually with state residents must adjust administratively before the deadline to avoid financial penalties.