You want to hold Bitcoin or other crypto in your retirement account. Most brokerages won’t let you do this. Fidelity and Schwab offer extremely limited crypto exposure through funds or futures. If you want to actually own the assets, you need a Self-Directed IRA.
This sounds great until you realize most people who set these up screw them up. They pick a Custodian who doesn’t understand crypto. They accidentally trigger prohibited transaction rules. They lose access to their keys. Or they pay 10x the fees they should because they didn’t understand the Custodian’s pricing structure.
Here’s how to do it correctly.
What a Self-Directed IRA Actually Is #
A regular IRA at Vanguard or Fidelity lets you buy stocks, bonds, and mutual funds. That’s it. Want to buy a rental property? Can’t do it. Want to invest in a startup? Not allowed. Want to hold actual Bitcoin instead of a Bitcoin ETF? Too bad.
A Self-Directed IRA removes most of those restrictions. You can invest in Real Estate, private companies, precious metals, crypto, and pretty much anything else that isn’t explicitly prohibited by IRS rules.
The IRS still treats it as a retirement account. Traditional SDIRA contributions are tax-deductible and you pay taxes when you withdraw. Roth SDIRA contributions are after-tax and withdrawals are tax-free after age 59½ (assuming you’ve had the account for five years). Same rules as regular IRAs, just different investment Options.
Why People Use SDIRAs for Crypto #
You think crypto will appreciate significantly over the next 20-30 years. If you’re right, you’d rather have that growth happen in a tax-advantaged account.
With a Roth SDIRA, you pay taxes on the money you contribute now. When you withdraw decades later, you pay zero taxes on the gains. If you put $50k into a Roth SDIRA and it grows to $2 million by retirement, you withdraw $2 million tax-free.
With a Traditional SDIRA, you get a tax deduction now. The money grows tax-deferred. You pay ordinary income tax when you withdraw. This makes sense if you think your tax rate will be lower in retirement.
The Diversification angle matters too. Your 401k is probably all stocks and bonds. Adding crypto gives you exposure to an Asset Class that doesn’t move in lockstep with traditional markets.
The IRS Prohibited Transaction Problem #
IRS prohibited transaction rules are brutal and most people don’t understand them until they’ve already violated them.
You cannot use your IRA assets for personal benefit. Period. You can’t store the crypto yourself on a hardware Wallet you control. You can’t use the crypto as Collateral for a personal loan. You can’t trade in and out frequently if you’re also trading crypto personally (this can trigger self-dealing rules). You can’t send IRA crypto to yourself personally. You can’t let family members use the assets. You can’t take any kind of personal benefit from the investments.
Violate these rules and the entire IRA can be deemed distributed. You owe income taxes on the full value plus a 10% early withdrawal penalty if you’re under 59½. A $100k mistake can cost you $45k instantly.
Most people don’t realize how strict this is. They think “it’s my IRA, I can do what I want.” Wrong. The Custodian owns the assets on behalf of the IRA. You direct investments but you don’t personally control anything.
Step 1: Find a Real Crypto Custodian #
This is where most people mess up. They google “crypto IRA” and pick the first company with a nice website.
Not all SDIRA custodians handle crypto. Of those that claim to, many don’t actually understand it. They’ll say they support crypto, but what they mean is they’ll let you invest in a fund that holds crypto. You don’t get actual Bitcoin in your account.
You need a Custodian that actually holds crypto (not just crypto-adjacent products), uses proper Custody (institutional-grade Cold Storage or qualified third-party custodians), understands Blockchain transactions and won’t freak out about normal crypto operations, and has reasonable fees (some charge flat annual fees, others charge percentage of assets, some charge per transaction).
Call them. Ask specific questions. “Can I hold actual Bitcoin, not a Bitcoin fund?” “What Custody solution do you use?” “How do I direct buy/sell orders?” “What happens if I want to stake or earn Yield?”
If they can’t answer clearly, keep looking.
Step 2: Pick Your IRA Type #
Traditional or Roth. This is a tax decision.
Traditional makes sense if you want the tax deduction now, you’re in a high tax bracket currently, you expect to be in a lower bracket in retirement, or you’re maxing out other retirement accounts and want more pre-tax space.
Roth makes sense if you expect crypto to explode in value, you’re young with decades until retirement, you’re in a relatively low bracket now, or you want tax-free withdrawals later.
Most people doing crypto IRAs pick Roth because they believe in massive appreciation. If Bitcoin goes from $60k to $500k over 20 years, they want that gain to be tax-free.
Step 3: Open and Fund the Account #
The Custodian will send you account opening paperwork. Fill it out. Provide ID verification. This part is straightforward.
Funding is where it gets tricky.
You can contribute directly (subject to annual IRA limits: $7,000 for 2024 if you’re under 50, $8,000 if you’re 50+). This is clean and simple.
You can transfer from an existing IRA at another Custodian. This is a trustee-to-trustee transfer. No taxes, no penalties. But it takes time, usually 2-4 weeks.
You can rollover from a 401k if you left your job or your plan allows in-service withdrawals. Rollovers have specific rules and deadlines. Screw up the timing and you trigger taxes and penalties.
Don’t try to get cute. Don’t take money out of your current IRA thinking you’ll deposit it into the SDIRA within 60 days. That’s a rollover and if anything goes wrong you’re paying taxes and penalties on the full amount. Do trustee-to-trustee transfers.
Step 4: Set Up Custody #
Your Custodian will work with a crypto Custody provider. Some have their own solutions. Others partner with third-party custodians like BitGo or Anchorage.
You don’t get to hold the keys yourself. That would violate prohibited transaction rules. The Custodian or their partner holds the crypto on behalf of your IRA.
Ask how they store it. Cold Storage (offline, more secure, slower to access). Hot wallets (online, less secure, faster to trade). Multi-signature setups (requires multiple parties to approve transactions).
Ask about Insurance. Some Custody solutions insure against theft or loss. Some don’t. If they don’t, you’re taking on that risk.
Ask about supported assets. Some custodians only support Bitcoin and Ethereum. Others support dozens of tokens. If you want to hold something obscure, make sure they support it before funding the account.
Step 5: Start Buying #
Once the account is funded and Custody is set up, you can direct investments.
This works differently than a regular brokerage. You don’t log in and click “buy Bitcoin.” You send instructions to the Custodian. “Buy X amount of Bitcoin at market price.” They execute the trade through their partner Exchange or OTC desk.
Some custodians have online portals where you submit investment directions. Others require phone calls or emails. This is slower and clunkier than Coinbase. Accept it.
Keep detailed records of every transaction. Date, amount, price, asset. The Custodian should provide statements but maintain your own records too.
Watch for fees on every transaction. Some custodians charge per trade. If you’re paying $50 per transaction and you’re dollar-cost averaging weekly, you’re bleeding money on fees.
What You Can’t Do #
Store the crypto yourself. Your IRA owns it. The Custodian holds it. You direct investments but you don’t personally control the keys.
Use it as Collateral for personal loans. That’s self-dealing.
Send crypto from your IRA to your personal Wallet. That’s a distribution and triggers taxes.
Buy crypto personally and sell it to your IRA. That’s a prohibited transaction with a disqualified person (yourself).
Take an IRA distribution in crypto and then immediately buy it back personally. The IRS will treat this as a wash sale or prohibited transaction.
Let your spouse, parents, or children benefit from the IRA assets before you take distributions. They’re disqualified persons under IRS rules.
The penalty for screwing this up is severe. The IRS can disqualify the entire IRA retroactive to the date of the prohibited transaction. Every dollar becomes taxable income. Plus 10% penalty if you’re under 59½.
Common Mistakes #
Picking a cheap Custodian who doesn’t actually understand crypto. You save $200/year in fees and then lose $50k because they screwed up Custody or couldn’t execute a trade when you needed them to.
Not understanding fee structures. Some custodians charge 1% of assets annually. If your crypto doubles, your fee doubles. That adds up over decades.
Trying to actively trade. Most SDIRA custodians can’t support high-frequency trading. The execution process is too slow. If you want to day-trade crypto, do it in a taxable account.
Forgetting about required minimum distributions (RMDs). Traditional IRAs require you to start taking distributions at age 73. If all your money is in volatile crypto, you might be forced to sell at a bad time to meet RMD requirements.
Not keeping records. The IRS will ask for documentation. Your Custodian might go out of business or lose records. Keep your own copies of everything.
Security and Compliance #
Your Custodian should provide annual statements showing all holdings and transactions. File these with your tax records.
You’ll report the IRA on your tax return (Form 5498 for contributions, 1099-R for distributions). The Custodian sends these forms to you and the IRS.
If you take early distributions before 59½, you owe income tax plus 10% penalty (with some exceptions like disability or first-time home purchase).
Review your account at least annually. Make sure the Custodian hasn’t gone bankrupt or lost your crypto. It happens. Custodians sometimes fail, especially in crypto.
Consider what happens if the Custodian shuts down. How do you transfer to another Custodian? What’s the process? Ask before you fund the account.
What Digital Wealth Partners Does #
Digital Wealth Partners helps people set up crypto-friendly SDIRAs correctly.
We connect you with custodians who actually handle crypto properly. We help you understand the fee structures before you commit. We walk through the prohibited transaction rules so you don’t accidentally blow up your IRA. We coordinate the account setup and funding process.
We’re a registered investment advisor. We can give you actual investment advice about Asset Allocation, when to rebalance, how much crypto makes sense for your situation. This is different from Digital Ascension Group, which handles administrative and operational work but doesn’t give investment advice.
When you need legal help (like understanding RMD rules or dealing with complex tax situations), we tell you to get your attorney or CPA involved. When you need trust structures or entity planning, Digital Ascension Group handles that side.
The goal is making sure your SDIRA is set up correctly, compliant with IRS rules, and actually accomplishes what you’re trying to do.
Is This Worth It? #
Depends on how much you believe in crypto and how long your time horizon is.
If you have 20+ years until retirement and you think crypto will significantly appreciate, a Roth SDIRA makes a lot of sense. Tax-free growth on an Asset Class you expect to 10x or more is powerful.
If you’re close to retirement or you’re not confident about long-term crypto appreciation, maybe just buy a Bitcoin ETF in your regular IRA. Less hassle, lower fees, similar exposure.
If you want to actively trade or use DeFi protocols, forget the SDIRA. The Custodian restrictions make this impractical. Just trade in a taxable account and pay the taxes.
SDIRAs work best for buy-and-hold strategies with assets you can’t access through traditional brokerages. If you can buy a Bitcoin ETF at Fidelity, that’s probably easier than setting up an SDIRA. If you want to hold actual Bitcoin or invest in early-stage Token projects, the SDIRA makes sense.
Do the math on fees over 20-30 years. A 1% annual fee on assets sounds small but compounds brutally. Run the numbers before committing.