Fees incurred to purchase or sell your assets is included in your cost basis calculation. https://www.schwab.com/resource-center/insights/content/a-tax-smart-approach-to-your-cost-basis
If you can find the fees in your coinbase account, then you can include them into your tax filing. If you cannot find the fees in your coinbase account, do an analysis of your total account balance, subtract your trade pnl from your actual balance and you can infer your fees paid to coinbase.
PS. It didn't occur to me earlier, but since this is Robinhood, which is a KYC compliant source you should be able to download a TXF file or CSV directly from them where you may not need to do any additional processing if you are using something like TurboTax. Here is an info page from Robinhood. Good Luck!
https://robinhood.com/us/en/support/articles/how-to-upload-your-1099-to-turbotax/
I've put my book,
Crypto Taxes Made Happy: The Definitive How-To Guide For Preparing Cryptocurrency Tax Returns In The United States
https://www.amazon.com/Crypto-Taxes-Made-Happy-How-ebook/dp/B07BPSK2VK/
on Amazon and gotten them to offer the digital version for free if anyone can use it for any assistance on items they are still unsure about.
My team is also available if anyone needs us as a service.
Under 20 days left in tax season! ;)
Just keep in mind that I'm not a tax expert. I would recommend double checking this information to make sure that I am correct. Here is the link I was using for my information: https://robinhood.com/us/en/support/articles/about-tax-documents/
It seems like you will receive a Consolidated Form 1099.
2018 was all crypto bust after the first 2 weeks, for boom you are thinking 2017.
> Binance has completely locked US accounts. I can't even get in to check out my history
Have you tried to log in from a non-US IP address, by using a highly rated free VPN, e.g., ProtonVPN?
Connect from Netherlands, not Japan or US, the other free options.
In fact, this access method still works for most legacy Binance users in the US.
Then download "all statements" (not "trade history") for each year you had any transactions.
Transferring coins out did not actually close your legacy Binance account, chances are it's still open.
If you no longer have Binance 2FA, then ask customer service for your statements and they'll email them to you, eventually.
When you do get and process them, you'll probably find that your past tax liability would not change much.
TLDR: I would grab your Binance statements while you still can, but either way, you are fine.
Academic side of academia? Not sure what that means, but it sounds like an unhealthy reason to do a PhD, FWIW.
If you're serious about finding your way in academia, I recommend the book <em>A PhD Is Not Enough!</em>
If you didn't delete your Binance account and still have its 2FA app (or backup), then you should still be able to log in, using any VPN with a non-US IP, e.g., ProtonVPN (free).
Or contact Binance support and they'll send you your history, as they've done for many former US clients.
If you did delete your account, do the best you can to calculate your annual gain/loss at Binance by figuring out your total deposits and withdrawals there.
Go over whatever transfer methods you used — bank, credit cards, other CEXs, hardware and software wallets, etc.
Same goes for Kraken.
/u/DudeofAltStreet2021