Arizona 2022 2022 Regular Session

Arizona House Bill HB2204 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/17/2022

                    Assigned to FIN 	FOR COMMITTEE 
 
 
 
 
ARIZONA STATE SENATE 
Fifty-Fifth Legislature, Second Regular Session 
 
REVISED 
FACT SHEET FOR H.B. 2204 
 
technical correction; wage board; powers 
(NOW: taxation; subtraction; virtual currency) 
Purpose 
Effective January 1, 2023, allows a taxpayer to deduct, in lieu of the standard deduction 
and the federal itemized deduction for personal casualty losses, the amount of personal casualty 
losses without consideration of the prescribed limitations and the amount of personal casualty 
losses related to virtual currency and nonfungible tokens (NFTs). Prescribes the treatment of 
virtual currency gains and losses.  
Background 
Individual income tax is levied on Arizona residents’ taxable income and uses a graduated 
rate structure, based on the taxpayer’s income level. The tax base begins with Arizona gross 
income, which is equivalent to the taxpayer's federal adjusted gross income (AGI). Statute 
authorizes various amounts to be added or subtracted when computing an individual's Arizona 
AGI, which is further reduced by standard or itemized deductions to arrive at Arizona taxable 
income (A.R.S. §§ 43-1021 – 43-1023; and 43-1042).  
The U.S. Internal Revenue Code allows a deduction for any loss sustained during the 
taxable year that is not compensated for by insurance or otherwise. The deduction is limited to:  
1) losses incurred in a trade or business; 2) losses incurred in any transaction entered into for profit 
not connected with a trade or business; and 3) losses of property not connected with a trade or 
business or a transaction entered into for profit, if the losses arise from theft or from fire, storm, 
shipwreck or other casualty. For TYs 2018 through 2025, an individual's personal casualty loss 
must be allowed as a deduction only to the extent that it is attributable to a federally declared 
disaster (26 U.S.C. § 165).  
The Joint Legislative Budget Committee fiscal note estimates that removing the 
requirement for a casualty loss to be limited to a federally declared disaster would result in a 
reduction of individual income tax revenue of at least $500,000 annually. For the cryptocurrency 
provisions, the fiscal impact appears to be minimal in some circumstances and would likely 
represent foregone potential revenue in other cases (JLBC fiscal note). 
Provisions 
1. Allows a taxpayer to deduct, in lieu of the standard deduction and the federal itemized 
deduction for personal casualty losses, the:  
a) amount of personal casualty losses allowed by the U.S. IRC without consideration of the 
prescribed limitations; and  
b) amount of personal casualty losses related to virtual currency and NFTs to the extent they 
are not already deducted.  FACT SHEET – Revised  
H.B. 2204 
Page 2 
 
 
2. Establishes an individual income tax subtraction, to the extent not already excluded from 
Arizona gross income under the U.S. IRC, for the value of virtual currency and NFTs the 
taxpayer received through an airdrop, at the time of the airdrop.  
3. Allows a taxpayer who included a gain or loss on the sale of virtual currency in their Arizona 
gross income to subtract gas fees from the taxpayer's Arizona gross income, if in calculating 
the gain or loss the taxpayer did not include any gas fees paid on the purchase of the virtual 
currency or did not otherwise deduct the gas fees in determining their Arizona gross income.  
4. Precludes the virtual currency and NFT subtraction from being interpreted as providing a 
subtraction for any appreciation in value that occurs from holding the currency after the initial 
receipt of the airdrop.  
5. Defines virtual currency as a digital representation of value that functions as a medium of 
exchange, a unit of account and a store of value other than a representation of the U.S. dollar 
or a foreign currency.  
6. Defines gas fee as a fee paid to the operator of a virtual network for the use of the network to 
facilitate the purchase or sale of virtual currency.  
7. Defines airdrop as the receipt of virtual currency through a means of distribution of virtual 
currency to the distributed ledger addresses of multiple taxpayers.  
8. Defines foreign currency. 
9. Makes conforming changes.  
10. Becomes effective on January 1, 2023.  
Revisions 
• Updates the fiscal impact statement.  
House Action 
COM  2/15/22  DPA/SE  9-1-0-0 
3
rd
 Read  2/23/22   52-7-1 
Prepared by Senate Research 
March 17, 2022 
MG/slp