# Illinois Enacts First State Crypto Transaction "Privilege Tax" *Author: David Christopher* *Published: Jun 17, 2026* *Source: https://www.bankless.com/de/read/news/illinois-enacts-first-state-crypto-transaction-privilege-tax* --- [Illinois Governor JB Pritzker](https://www.coindesk.com/policy/2026/06/17/crypto-industry-aghast-at-illinois-new-tax-on-holding-or-transferring-digital-assets-in-state-budget) signed SB 3019 into law, a budget bill that includes the Digital Asset Tax Act, creating what appears to be the first state-level *transaction* tax targeting digital asset activity. The 0.2% "privilege tax" takes effect January 1, 2027. ## What's the Scoop? - **Who Collects It:** The tax is imposed on "[digital asset brokers](https://www.pwc.com/us/en/services/tax/library/pwc-illinois-legislature-passes-budget-bill-with-new-digital-taxes.html?utm_source=chatgpt.com)" operating in Illinois or serving Illinois customers above certain thresholds. In practice, that appears to mean exchanges, custodians, trading platforms, and other intermediaries rather than individual users directly. Based on the law's structure, taxable activity could include customers sending digital assets to an exchange wallet or an exchange moving assets between wallets it controls. However, exactly which transfers will be taxed depends on how regulators interpret and implement the law. Opponents also argue that any costs imposed on those businesses will ultimately be passed through to customers. - **The Self-Custody Question:** The law's biggest unanswered question is how broadly regulators will define taxable digital asset activity. It's unclear whether the law reaches self-custody activity, including transfers between wallets controlled by the same person, transactions through software wallets like MetaMask or Rabby, or interactions with DeFi protocols. Because collection responsibilities fall on brokers, purely self-custodied and peer-to-peer activity may be difficult to tax in practice. Industry groups nonetheless argue the statutory language is broad enough to create uncertainty around those use cases. --- *This article is brought to you by [Bitget](https://www.bankless.com/de/sponsor/bitget-1769543635?ref=read/news/illinois-enacts-first-state-crypto-transaction-privilege-tax)*