How do I connect my CredoEx account to CoinTracker?
To add your CredoEx transactions to CoinTracker:
Download the CSV export of your transactions from CredoEx
Reformat those transactions into our CoinTracker CSV format (see our support guide here)
Import your CSV export to CoinTracker here
How are CredoEx transactions taxed?
Crypto transactions on CredoEx are taxable under most jurisdictions' regulations.
Capital gains tax: Applies when you sold, traded, or swapped crypto on CredoEx. Gains or losses are calculated based on the difference between the sale price and your cost basis.
Income tax: Applies if you earned crypto through staking, referrals, or promotions while using CredoEx. The fair market value at the time you received the crypto counts as taxable income.
CoinTracker automatically calculates these amounts and integrates them into your overall portfolio, even for legacy or defunct exchanges.
Do I have to pay taxes on CredoEx?
Yes. You are required to report all crypto activity from CredoEx for the years you used it, even if the platform is no longer active. This includes:
Selling crypto for fiat or other tokens
Trading between crypto pairs (e.g., BTC/ETH)
Receiving staking rewards, bonuses, or referral income
CoinTracker ensures your prior CredoEx transactions are accurately captured and reflected in your historical tax reports.
Does CredoEx provide tax documents?
CredoEx previously provided CSV transaction exports for users, but no official tax forms (like 1099s).
If you still have your transaction history files (or access to old account exports), you can upload them directly to CoinTracker to automatically calculate your historical crypto taxes.
If you no longer have access, you can manually enter your transactions into CoinTracker.
How to get your CredoEx tax documents
Check your archived emails or files for any CSV or trade report from CredoEx.
If available, locate the file with your full transaction history (deposits, trades, and withdrawals).
Log in to CoinTracker.
Go to Add Account → Manual Entry → Upload CSV.
Upload your file to generate your tax reports automatically.
If you no longer have your CSVs, you can manually recreate transactions by referencing your crypto wallet records or blockchain data.
When did CredoEx issue tax forms like Form 1099-MISC or 1099-B?
CredoEx did not issue U.S. tax forms such as 1099-MISC or 1099-B.
It operated as an international crypto exchange and did not participate in IRS or EU-level broker reporting.
Users are responsible for self-reporting all CredoEx activity through CoinTracker or equivalent tools.
Why aren't my CredoEx documents accurate?
If your CredoEx data appears incomplete, it may be due to:
Missing trading pairs or withdrawal records from partial exports
Lost data after the platform shutdown
Unrecorded transfers to external wallets
CoinTracker allows you to import replacement data from blockchain explorers or other connected exchanges to ensure your report is complete and accurate.
Does CredoEx automatically deduct taxes?
No. CredoEx did not deduct or remit taxes on behalf of users.
You are responsible for reporting your crypto activity.
CoinTracker simplifies this by calculating realized gains, income, and portfolio summaries automatically for the years you used CredoEx.
Does CredoEx report to tax authorities?
No. CredoEx did not report user data to the IRS, ATO, or any national tax authority.
However, you are still required to declare your crypto income and gains in your tax return.
CoinTracker ensures your records are compliant, even for historical or defunct exchanges.
Does CredoEx provide financial or end-of-year statements?
CredoEx users could previously export trade and deposit summaries, but the exchange no longer issues new statements.
If you have archived exports or wallet records from your CredoEx activity, you can upload them to CoinTracker to reconstruct your end-of-year summaries and gain/loss reports.