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How to use the 'History Export' for taxes on Binance? (Data management)

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Mar 01, 2026 at 11:40 am

Understanding Binance History Export Functionality

1. Binance provides a built-in tool named “History Export” under the [Wallet] section, accessible via the web interface or desktop application.

2. This feature allows users to retrieve transaction records including deposits, withdrawals, spot trades, margin activity, futures settlements, and staking events.

3. Export formats are limited to CSV only, with date ranges constrained by account verification level and regulatory jurisdiction—KYC Tier 1 users may only access 90 days, while Tier 3 users can pull up to 365 days.

4. Timezone defaults to UTC, and timestamps appear in ISO 8601 format (e.g., 2023-04-12T08:34:12Z), requiring manual alignment if local tax authorities mandate regional time zones.

5. Each export file contains headers such as “Date(UTC)”, “Pair”, “Side”, “Price”, “Quantity”, “Fee”, and “Fee Coin”, which form the foundational dataset for cost-basis calculations.

Preparing Data for Tax Reporting Compliance

1. Tax jurisdictions like the IRS, HMRC, or ATO treat crypto disposals—including trades between tokens—as taxable events, meaning every line in the exported CSV must be evaluated for capital gains or losses.

2. Binance does not auto-categorize transactions into “buy”, “sell”, “gift”, or “airdrop”; users must manually tag entries using external spreadsheets or compatible tax software.

3. The “Fee” column reflects network or trading fees paid in native assets, and these amounts must be converted to the reporting currency at the time of the transaction to determine deductible expenses.

4. Deposits and withdrawals require cross-referencing with external wallet addresses to confirm whether they represent transfers (non-taxable) or income (taxable), especially when linked to mining rewards or referral bonuses.

5. Futures PnL statements exported separately from the Derivatives tab do not integrate with spot history files, demanding parallel reconciliation to avoid double-counting or omission of realized gains.

Handling Gaps and Inconsistencies in Exported Records

1. Users frequently encounter missing rows for OCO orders, stop-limit executions, or partial fills—these appear fragmented across multiple lines without explicit linkage, complicating trade reconstruction.

2. Staking rewards exported under “Earn” history list payout dates but omit underlying APR/APY mechanics or compounding intervals, making it difficult to isolate principal vs. yield components for income classification.

3. Margin interest charges appear in negative values under “Fee”, yet lack counterparty identification, preventing clear distinction between borrowing costs and trading commissions.

4. API-based exports via Binance’s REST endpoints return identical schema but allow pagination control and timestamp precision down to milliseconds—critical for high-frequency traders disputing execution order.

5. Historical data prior to March 2020 shows truncated fee denominations (e.g., “0.00000000” instead of full decimal precision), forcing manual interpolation using average block confirmation times and on-chain fee estimators.

Integrating Exports with Third-Party Tax Tools

1. Supported platforms like Koinly, CryptoTaxCalculator, and Accointing accept direct CSV uploads but require strict adherence to delimiter rules—Binance exports use commas, yet some fields contain embedded commas inside memo notes, triggering parsing errors unless escaped.

2. Certain tools misinterpret “Buy”/“Sell” labels in margin trade exports as spot activity, assigning incorrect acquisition dates and inflating short-term gain exposure.

3. Futures delivery settlement rows labeled “Delivery” in the “Operation” field are often excluded by default parsers, omitting critical realized profit entries unless custom rule sets are applied.

4. When importing multiple CSVs across asset classes, duplicate detection relies solely on timestamp + amount + asset pair matching—failing to catch identical trades executed milliseconds apart across different sub-accounts.

5. Binance’s “Transaction History” export omits internal transfers between Spot and Funding wallets, requiring manual ledger reconciliation using “Funding Wallet Transfer History” exports to preserve balance continuity.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Does Binance include fiat deposit/withdrawal records in History Export?No. Fiat gateway activity is excluded entirely from all standard History Export options. These entries exist only within the “Fiat and Spot Wallet” interface and require screenshot-based documentation or bank statement correlation.

Q: Can I export trade history for sub-accounts separately?Yes. Sub-account history must be accessed individually by switching context in the top-right corner before initiating any export—main account credentials do not auto-propagate transaction filters.

Q: Why do some withdrawal records show “Processing” status in exported files?This indicates the withdrawal was initiated but not yet confirmed on-chain at the time of export generation. Such rows lack blockchain hash and final destination address, requiring follow-up via the “Withdrawal History” page.

Q: Are P2P trade records included in the standard History Export?No. Peer-to-peer transactions are siloed under the “P2P Trading” section and demand separate export steps using the dedicated P2P transaction report generator.

Disclaimer:info@kdj.com

The information provided is not trading advice. kdj.com does not assume any responsibility for any investments made based on the information provided in this article. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and it is highly recommended that you invest with caution after thorough research!

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