Accounting for cryptocurrency in the UK has become a board-level question even for companies that hold only modest treasury balances. There is no specific FRS 102 standard for crypto, so businesses apply the existing intangible asset, inventory or financial instrument rules — and HMRC’s tax treatment can diverge from the accounting answer.

Accounting classification under FRS 102

The Financial Reporting Council confirmed that crypto generally does not meet the definition of cash, a financial asset or a non-financial financial instrument. The remaining options are:

HoldingFRS 102 classification
Held as long-term treasury assetIntangible asset (Section 18)
Held for sale in ordinary courseInventory (Section 13)
Held by a broker-dealerInventory at fair value less costs to sell
Mining rewards (recognised as earned)Revenue (Section 23), then intangible
Tokens received as paymentRevenue at fair value at receipt

Most companies fall in the intangible asset bucket, which means cost less impairment and no gains until sale.

HMRC tax treatment

HMRC’s Cryptoassets Manual sets out the tax view, which is normally driven by the substance of the activity, not the accounting label.

ActivityTypical UK tax treatment
Company holding tokens long-termIntangible fixed assets / chargeable gain on disposal
Trading tokens speculativelyTrading profits (corporation tax)
Mining (small scale)Miscellaneous income at fair value
Mining as a tradeTrading profits
Staking rewardsMiscellaneous income or trading
Customer payment in cryptoRevenue at GBP fair value, plus FX-equivalent gain/loss

Indicators of trading include frequency, organisation, and commercial intent — the same “badges of trade” tests as any other asset.

Practical bookkeeping points

  • Record each acquisition with GBP cost at the date of purchase
  • Maintain a wallet-by-wallet ledger with txid, blockchain and counterparty
  • Re-test for impairment at each balance sheet date
  • Disclose the accounting policy explicitly in the notes
  • Report disposals as either chargeable gains or trading income
  • Set up a clear chart-of-accounts code, e.g. “Intangible asset – cryptocurrency”
  • Run a year-end review against your year-end checklist

Disclosures and audit

Listed companies and larger SMEs holding material crypto must disclose the carrying amount, valuation methodology, security/custody arrangements, and any material impairments. The audit risk areas are existence (custody and private keys) and valuation at year-end.

Final thoughts

Crypto is no longer fringe in UK SME finance — make sure the accounting policy survives a year-end audit. Pair this with our FRS 102 for UK SMEs article, the corporation tax CT600 filing guide, and the bank reconciliation explainer. The FRC Staff Education Note on cryptoassets is a useful starting point. See pricing for accounting software with multi-currency and digital asset support.