Contents
- What Is a Prohibited Transaction?
- Disqualified Persons: The Full List
- The Six Categories of Prohibited Transactions
- Bitcoin-Specific Prohibited Transaction Risks
- The Checkbook IRA LLC: Flexibility and Danger
- Consequences: What IRA Disqualification Actually Costs
- UBIT: The Other SDIRA Tax Trap for Bitcoin Miners
- Estate Planning Consequences of IRA Disqualification
- Statutory Exemptions and Corrections
- 8-Item Prohibited Transaction Audit Checklist
What Is a Prohibited Transaction?
A prohibited transaction under IRC §4975 is any transaction between an IRA (or other qualified plan) and a "disqualified person" that falls into one of six prohibited categories. The statute applies to all IRAs — traditional, Roth, SEP, SIMPLE — including self-directed IRAs holding Bitcoin, real estate, private equity, or other alternative assets.
The policy rationale: IRAs receive favorable tax treatment (deferred taxation or tax-free growth) because Congress intended them for retirement savings — not as vehicles for self-dealing or for conferring current economic benefit on the IRA owner and their associates. The prohibited transaction rules enforce this by making self-dealing catastrophically expensive.
The IRS does not need to prove intent to impose consequences. An accidental prohibited transaction — one where the IRA owner genuinely did not know the rules — carries exactly the same penalty as a deliberate one. The tax and penalty apply automatically.
The nuclear consequence: A prohibited transaction does not trigger a tax on the transaction amount. It disqualifies the entire IRA as of the first day of the tax year in which the prohibited transaction occurred — even if the transaction happened on December 31st. The entire account balance is treated as distributed and becomes ordinary income on January 1st of that year. For a $3M Bitcoin SDIRA, the tax bill is approximately $1.11M in federal income tax (at 37%), potentially plus the 10% early withdrawal penalty ($300,000) if under 59½ — a combined $1.41M tax event on a single unintended transaction.
Disqualified Persons: The Full List
The prohibited transaction rules only apply to transactions involving "disqualified persons." Knowing who is and is not a disqualified person is the first line of defense.
Under IRC §4975(e)(2), disqualified persons include:
| Category | Who Is Included | Who Is NOT Included |
|---|---|---|
| The IRA owner | You, as the IRA owner and fiduciary | — |
| Spouse | Your spouse (regardless of citizenship) | — |
| Lineal descendants | Your children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren (and their spouses) | Siblings, nieces, nephews, cousins |
| Lineal ancestors | Your parents, grandparents | Aunts, uncles, in-laws (except spouse) |
| Controlled entities | Any corporation, partnership, trust, or estate in which you (and disqualified persons) own ≥50% combined | Entities where you own <50% |
| Fiduciaries | The SDIRA custodian, any investment manager for the IRA, any advisor with discretionary control over IRA assets | Third-party professional advisors without discretion |
| Service providers | Anyone who provides services to the IRA (accountants, attorneys, property managers — if paid by the IRA) | Service providers paid personally, not by the IRA |
The most counterintuitive exclusion: siblings are not disqualified persons. You can transact with a sibling in your SDIRA — sell them Bitcoin held in the IRA, buy their property with IRA funds — without triggering a prohibited transaction (though fair market value is still required to avoid other issues). This creates planning opportunities but also confusion for IRA owners who assume all family members are disqualified.
The Six Categories of Prohibited Transactions
IRC §4975(c)(1) defines six categories of prohibited transactions between an IRA and a disqualified person:
Category 1: Sale, Exchange, or Leasing of Property
Any sale, exchange, or lease of property between the IRA and a disqualified person — at any price, even fair market value — is prohibited. This means:
- You cannot sell Bitcoin from your personal wallet to your SDIRA (even at market price)
- You cannot buy Bitcoin from your SDIRA with personal funds
- You cannot lease space in an IRA-owned property to yourself or your business
- You cannot transfer Bitcoin between your personal wallet and your SDIRA's custodian wallet — this is a sale or exchange even if no cash changes hands
Category 2: Lending Money or Extending Credit
The IRA cannot lend money to a disqualified person, and no disqualified person can lend money to the IRA. This includes:
- Using IRA assets as collateral for a personal loan (the collateralization itself is the prohibited extension of credit)
- Borrowing from your SDIRA
- The IRA lending Bitcoin to you or a family member
- A non-recourse loan from a disqualified person to the IRA
Category 3: Furnishing Goods, Services, or Facilities
No disqualified person can provide services to the IRA for compensation, and the IRA cannot provide services to disqualified persons. This means:
- You cannot be paid by your SDIRA to manage its Bitcoin investments (even if you are the most qualified person to do so)
- Your accounting firm cannot be paid by the IRA for services rendered to the IRA
- Your property management company (if you own ≥50%) cannot manage IRA-owned real estate
Category 4: Transfer or Use of IRA Assets for Personal Benefit
No disqualified person can use or benefit from IRA assets. This is the broadest category and captures many unintentional violations:
- Using a hardware wallet funded by your SDIRA to temporarily hold personal Bitcoin
- Allowing a family member to stay in IRA-owned property
- Using mining equipment owned by your SDIRA to mine Bitcoin for your personal wallet
Category 5: Self-Dealing by a Fiduciary
A fiduciary of the IRA (including the IRA owner, who is considered a fiduciary of their own IRA) cannot deal with IRA assets for their own account or receive personal benefit from a transaction involving the IRA's assets.
Category 6: Acting as an Adverse Party
A fiduciary cannot act as a principal in a transaction involving IRA assets on behalf of a third party whose interests are adverse to the IRA. This primarily applies to institutional fiduciaries but can affect IRA owners in complex business arrangements.
Bitcoin-Specific Prohibited Transaction Risks
The unique characteristics of Bitcoin — self-custody wallets, private key management, DeFi protocols, collateralized lending platforms — create several transaction patterns that are not obviously prohibited but are.
1. Using SDIRA Bitcoin as Collateral for a Personal Loan
This is the most common and most dangerous Bitcoin SDIRA violation. The scenario: your SDIRA holds $500,000 in Bitcoin. You want liquidity without selling. A crypto lending platform (Ledn, Coinbase Prime, BlockFi equivalent) offers you a personal loan collateralized by the Bitcoin in your SDIRA.
The result: prohibited transaction under §4975(c)(1)(B). You — a disqualified person — have received credit from the IRA (the IRA's assets are being used to secure your personal debt). The entire SDIRA is disqualified. The full $500,000 is ordinary income in the year of the collateralization.
The correct structure: if you want a Bitcoin-collateralized loan, use personally held Bitcoin (outside the IRA) as collateral. Never use SDIRA-held Bitcoin.
2. Transferring Bitcoin Between Personal Wallet and SDIRA
You own Bitcoin in a personal Ledger hardware wallet. You want to "move" it into your SDIRA to take advantage of tax-deferred growth. You send it to the SDIRA's custodian wallet address.
This is a sale or exchange of property between a disqualified person (you) and the IRA — prohibited under §4975(c)(1)(A). The IRS treats the transfer as if you sold the Bitcoin to the IRA at market value. The SDIRA is disqualified.
The correct approach: cash contributions to the IRA (within annual limits), then the IRA custodian purchases Bitcoin in the market. Never transfer existing Bitcoin holdings directly into an SDIRA.
3. Providing Personal Services to an SDIRA-Owned Business
Your SDIRA owns a 40% interest in a private Bitcoin mining LLC. You serve as the CEO of that LLC and receive a management fee. Even if your compensation is at arm's length market rates, you — a disqualified person — are providing services to an entity owned by your IRA, and the IRA is bearing the cost of your compensation indirectly.
This is a gray area that has been litigated, but the dominant practitioner view is that significant personal services provided to an IRA-owned business, even through an LLC, risk prohibited transaction classification. The checkbook IRA LLC (see below) attempts to navigate this, but the line is genuinely unclear.
4. DeFi Protocols and SDIRA Assets
Yield farming, liquidity provision, and lending protocols require active wallet interaction. If your SDIRA Bitcoin is in a DeFi protocol and you personally interact with that protocol wallet (even to manage positions), you may be providing services to the IRA's assets — a potential Category 3 or 4 violation. DeFi activity inside an SDIRA is genuinely unsettled territory with significant prohibited transaction risk.
5. Buying or Selling with Related-Party NFTs or Tokens
Any exchange involving the SDIRA on one side and you or your entities on the other — including token swaps, NFT trades, or private sale of digital assets — is a prohibited sale or exchange. The digital asset's characterization as a novel instrument doesn't change the fundamental §4975 analysis.
The Checkbook IRA LLC: Flexibility and Prohibited Transaction Danger
The "checkbook IRA" structure — where the SDIRA owns 100% of a single-member LLC, and the IRA owner manages the LLC as its manager — is widely marketed as providing investment flexibility for alternative assets including Bitcoin. The theory: the IRA owns the LLC, and the LLC (not the IRA owner personally) holds the Bitcoin. The IRA owner acts as manager of the LLC.
The IRS has not officially blessed this structure, and it creates several prohibited transaction risks that are frequently understated by custodians marketing SDIRAs:
The Swanson Tax Court Ruling
In Swanson v. Commissioner, the Tax Court held that certain transactions in a checkbook IRA LLC structure did not constitute prohibited transactions because the IRA owner acted only in a non-fiduciary managerial capacity. However, the case's protective scope is narrow — it does not give blanket clearance to all checkbook IRA transactions, and subsequent cases have found prohibited transactions in similar structures.
Where Checkbook IRAs Go Wrong with Bitcoin
- Manager compensation: If the LLC manager (you) takes any fee or compensation from the LLC for managing the Bitcoin investment, the IRA has paid a disqualified person for services — prohibited.
- Personal use of LLC assets: If you use the LLC's hardware wallet for any personal transaction, even once, that is a prohibited use of IRA assets for personal benefit.
- Contribution of personal property to the LLC: Contributing Bitcoin from your personal wallet to the LLC (which is IRA-owned) is a sale or exchange between a disqualified person and the IRA — prohibited, even if framed as an LLC capital contribution.
- Loans between you and the LLC: You cannot lend money to the LLC or borrow from it. The LLC is treated as the IRA for prohibited transaction purposes.
The checkbook IRA is a tool, not a workaround. Used properly — with an independent qualified custodian, strict separation of personal and IRA assets, no compensation to the manager, and no personal use of any IRA-owned asset — the checkbook IRA LLC can provide legitimate Bitcoin investment flexibility. Used sloppily — which is how most are administered — it is a prohibited transaction waiting to happen.
Consequences: What IRA Disqualification Actually Costs
The mechanics of IRA disqualification under IRC §408(e)(2):
- The IRA ceases to be an IRA as of January 1st of the tax year in which the prohibited transaction occurred
- The entire fair market value of the IRA on that January 1st is treated as distributed to you
- The full amount is ordinary income in that tax year
- If you are under age 59½, the additional 10% early withdrawal tax applies to the entire distribution
- If the IRA was a Roth IRA, the tax consequences depend on whether the distribution is of basis (after-tax contributions, which come out tax-free) or earnings (which are taxable and potentially penalized)
| SDIRA Fair Market Value | Age ≥ 59½ — Federal Tax (37%) | Age < 59½ — Fed Tax + 10% Penalty | State Tax (CA 13.3% example) | Total Worst Case (CA, under 59½) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $500,000 | $185,000 | $235,000 | $66,500 | $301,500 |
| $1,000,000 | $370,000 | $470,000 | $133,000 | $603,000 |
| $2,000,000 | $740,000 | $940,000 | $266,000 | $1,206,000 |
| $5,000,000 | $1,850,000 | $2,350,000 | $665,000 | $3,015,000 |
Note: these are federal-only or federal+CA estimates. Most states tax IRA distributions as ordinary income. The figures illustrate why prohibited transaction avoidance is the single most critical compliance issue for SDIRA holders with large Bitcoin positions.
UBIT: The Other SDIRA Tax Trap for Bitcoin Mining
Prohibited transactions are not the only tax hazard for Bitcoin SDIRAs. Unrelated Business Income Tax (UBIT) under IRC §511–514 applies when an IRA engages in an active trade or business — including Bitcoin mining.
An IRA is a tax-exempt entity. But Congress created UBIT to prevent tax-exempt entities from competing unfairly with taxable businesses in active commerce. If your SDIRA owns a mining operation (directly or through an LLC), the mining income is Unrelated Business Taxable Income (UBTI) — subject to tax at trust tax rates, which are compressed and punishing:
| UBTI Amount | Trust Tax Rate (2026) | Tax Owed |
|---|---|---|
| First $2,900 | 10% | $290 |
| $2,901–$10,550 | 24% | $1,836 |
| $10,551–$14,450 | 35% | $1,365 |
| Over $14,450 | 37% | 37% on every dollar above $14,450 |
The 37% trust bracket kicks in at just $14,450 of net mining income. An IRA with $500,000 in mining revenue and $350,000 in expenses (net UBTI: $150,000) owes approximately $55,000 in UBIT — before any state UBIT. The tax-deferred advantage of the IRA is largely eliminated for the mining income itself, though the Bitcoin acquired can still compound tax-deferred once acquired.
Critically: UBIT is separate from prohibited transaction analysis. Your IRA can owe UBIT on mining income without triggering a prohibited transaction — they are independent tax issues. But a mining operation inside an SDIRA creates both prohibited transaction risk (if the owner manages it) AND UBIT liability simultaneously.
The practical conclusion for most families: mining is better conducted in a taxable entity (LLC, S-Corp) that can use the Section 179/bonus depreciation deduction to offset income, and then the mined Bitcoin is held personally or transferred to a dynasty trust. Running mining inside an SDIRA captures neither the depreciation benefit (IRAs don't benefit from depreciation deductions) nor the step-up basis advantage, while adding UBIT exposure and prohibited transaction risk.
The SDIRA sweet spot for Bitcoin: Simple passive holding — buy Bitcoin through the SDIRA custodian, hold it, let it appreciate tax-deferred (traditional IRA) or tax-free (Roth IRA). No active management by the owner, no mining, no DeFi, no collateral pledges. The SDIRA's value is the passive accumulation benefit, not operational flexibility. Keep it simple, keep it clean.
Estate Planning Consequences of IRA Disqualification
IRA disqualification isn't just a current-year tax problem — it destroys years of carefully constructed estate planning:
Loss of Beneficiary Designation Planning
A properly titled IRA with correct beneficiary designations passes outside of probate, directly to named beneficiaries, with specific tax treatment under the inherited IRA rules. An SDIRA that is disqualified no longer exists as an IRA — it is simply a taxable account, and its distribution to the estate or beneficiaries is governed by the estate plan (will, trust) rather than the beneficiary designation. The streamlined IRA succession planning is eliminated.
Loss of Roth Conversion Benefits
If you have been executing a Roth conversion strategy — moving traditional IRA Bitcoin to a Roth IRA over time to achieve tax-free growth and inheritance — a prohibited transaction in any year disqualifies the entire IRA back to January 1st, wiping out conversions completed that year and creating unexpected taxable income.
The 10-Year Rule and Inherited IRA Planning
Under the SECURE Act, most non-spouse beneficiaries must withdraw inherited IRA assets within 10 years. Beneficiaries inheriting a large Bitcoin SDIRA have typically structured their spending plan around that 10-year window. If the IRA is disqualified during the original owner's lifetime, the beneficiaries inherit a taxable account rather than an IRA — losing the 10-year tax-deferred growth window entirely.
Generation-Skipping Trust and IRA Interaction
Sophisticated estate plans sometimes name a trust (rather than an individual) as the IRA beneficiary — allowing the IRA distributions to accumulate in a trust for grandchildren's benefit. An IRA disqualification event destroys the IRA before any trust-based succession planning can execute.
Statutory Exemptions and Corrections
The prohibited transaction rules include several statutory exemptions for common transactions that would otherwise be prohibited:
- Rollovers: Direct rollovers from one IRA to another are not prohibited transactions when executed correctly — the custodian transfers directly to the new custodian without the funds passing through the account owner's hands.
- IRA owner as fiduciary: Certain administrative acts by the IRA owner (directing investments, selecting custodians, executing rollover instructions) are not prohibited transactions even though the owner is a disqualified person.
- Department of Labor exemptions: The DOL has granted class exemptions for certain financial service transactions. These primarily affect institutional plans rather than individual IRAs.
There is no general "correction" mechanism for individual IRA prohibited transactions. Unlike qualified plan prohibited transactions (which have a correction program), an individual IRA that has engaged in a prohibited transaction is simply disqualified. The tax is owed. The IRA no longer exists. There is nothing to correct after the fact.
The only recourse is prevention — which is why the prohibited transaction audit checklist below matters.
Bitcoin Mining Tax Strategy Resource
For Bitcoin-wealthy families evaluating whether mining should be inside or outside an IRA structure, Abundant Mines' tax strategy resource explains how direct ownership mining compares to IRA-held mining on a complete after-tax basis — including UBIT, prohibited transaction risk, and the depreciation advantage unavailable inside an IRA.
Download the Mining Tax Strategy Guide →8-Item Prohibited Transaction Audit Checklist
- Inventory all transactions between your SDIRA and any person or entity. Pull the SDIRA custodian statements for the past three years. List every transaction where the other party is you, your spouse, your children or their spouses, your parents, or any business you control ≥50%. Flag each for prohibited transaction review.
- Confirm you have never pledged SDIRA assets as collateral. Check every loan agreement — personal mortgages, crypto-collateralized loans, margin accounts, business loans — and confirm that no SDIRA account or SDIRA-held asset appears as collateral. If it does, seek immediate tax counsel.
- Audit your Bitcoin wallet addresses. If you use the same hardware wallet or software wallet for both SDIRA-held and personally held Bitcoin, separate them immediately. SDIRA Bitcoin must live on a wallet or custodian account that is used exclusively for IRA assets. No co-mingling.
- Verify your SDIRA custodian is not a disqualified person. Your SDIRA custodian is a fiduciary and therefore a disqualified person for transaction purposes. The custodian itself cannot be a related party (a family member's company, an entity you control) — it must be an independent qualified trustee or custodian.
- Review all service agreements paid by your SDIRA. Any service provider being paid directly by the SDIRA (property managers, investment advisors, accountants, attorneys) must be an arm's-length third party — not a disqualified person and not an entity you control. Review fee agreements and payer.
- Assess checkbook IRA LLC compliance. If you use a checkbook IRA LLC, confirm: (a) you receive zero compensation from the LLC, (b) no personal assets have been contributed to or withdrawn from the LLC, (c) the LLC has never transacted with you or any disqualified person, (d) the LLC's Bitcoin wallets are used exclusively for IRA assets.
- Calculate UBIT exposure if the IRA holds an active business. If your SDIRA owns any interest in an operating business, mining operation, or DeFi protocol generating active income, calculate the UBTI and confirm Form 990-T has been filed and UBIT paid for each relevant year. Unfiled UBIT returns create compounding exposure.
- Establish annual review as a standing calendar item. Prohibited transaction risk grows as Bitcoin SDIRAs grow in value and as the family's business interests evolve. Schedule an annual review with a tax professional specifically focused on SDIRA compliance — this is not adequately covered in a standard tax return review.
The Bottom Line
The SDIRA is one of the most powerful vehicles for Bitcoin wealth accumulation: tax-deferred growth (traditional) or tax-free growth (Roth) on an asset that has compounded at extraordinary rates. A $50,000 Bitcoin investment in an SDIRA in 2016 would be worth several million dollars today — all untouched by capital gains tax.
That entire tax-free compounding can be destroyed in one accidental transaction. Not a bad investment. Not a market crash. One transaction with the wrong counterparty, or one pledge of IRA assets as collateral, or one improperly managed checkbook IRA LLC interaction.
The rules are not ambiguous or controversial — they are well-established statutory provisions that have been in the Code since 1975. The problem is that they are specific to IRAs and most financial advisors, accountants, and attorneys don't routinely advise clients about them in the context of Bitcoin SDIRAs. The SDIRA holder is largely on their own to understand and comply.
Use the SDIRA for what it does best: passive Bitcoin accumulation, held at a qualified custodian, with beneficiary designations aligned to your estate plan, and managed with strict separation from your personal Bitcoin holdings. Don't try to use it as a flexible operating account. Don't pledge it. Don't transact with family members through it. The tax benefit is real and substantial — but only for accounts that stay compliant.
See also: Bitcoin Self-Directed IRA: Complete Guide · Bitcoin IRA Estate Planning · Bitcoin Roth IRA Conversion Strategy · Bitcoin Inherited IRA Rules
36 Questions to Ask Your Bitcoin Custodian or Mining Host
Whether you are evaluating a custodian for an SDIRA or a hosting provider for a mining operation, the due diligence questions that protect your assets are surprisingly similar. Abundant Mines' checklist covers financial stability, custody architecture, insurance, and operational transparency.
Download the Due Diligence Checklist →