Understanding Tax Implications
A high-level overview of tax considerations and how Rebind supports tax reporting.

Steven Figura
·
Dec 16, 2025
Rebind does not provide tax advice. Instead, it is designed to give you clear access to your activity and history so you can report taxes according to the rules that apply to you.
This article provides a high-level overview of how taxes typically relate to savings products like Rebind and what information is available to support your own tax reporting.
How savings and taxes generally relate
In many countries, income earned on savings may be taxable.
Whether tax applies, how it is calculated, and when it must be reported depends on factors such as:
your country of tax residence
whether you are an individual or a business
applicable allowances or thresholds
how savings income (especially from stablecoins) is classified locally
These rules are set by local tax authorities and can change over time.
Rebind’s role and limitations
Rebind does not calculate, withhold, or pay taxes on your behalf.
Instead, Rebind acts as a savings platform that:
tracks your deposits, withdrawals, and earned yield
provides a transparent record of your account activity
makes this information accessible so you can use it for tax reporting
It is your responsibility to determine how your activity should be declared according to the laws that apply to you.
Accessing your activity history
Rebind provides access to a detailed history of your account activity, including:
deposits and withdrawals
capital gains and losses over time
balances in EUR and USD
transaction timestamps
This information can be exported or reviewed to support tax reporting or shared with a tax advisor.
In short
Tax rules vary by country and personal situation. Rebind does not provide tax advice, but it gives you transparent access to your savings activity so you can report taxes according to the rules that apply to you.

