Losing money in a crypto scam is emotionally and financially devastating. After a pig butchering crypto scam, you may ask: Can you recover losses through your tax return?
At Powell Tax Law, we guide crypto investors, business owners, and individual taxpayers through IRS rules on digital asset losses. This post highlights when scam victims may qualify for a tax deduction and key steps before filing.
A pig butchering scam is a type of investment fraud. Victims are often lured via social media or dating apps through fake relationships or friendly trust-building. Then, they are persuaded to invest increasing amounts, usually cryptocurrency, into fraudulent platforms promising big returns. Once scammers have enough funds, they “slaughter” the pig: the entire investment is stolen.
For many victims, this leaves them not only with financial losses but also uncertainty about their tax obligations or relief.
Under U.S. tax law, losses from theft may be deductible, but only under specific conditions. A theft loss occurs when money or property is illegally taken with criminal intent, and the deductible amount is generally the owner’s adjusted basis since the property is considered worthless after the theft. For tax years 2018–2025, individuals may claim a deduction for theft losses if the loss arose from a profit-motivated transaction. Special rules may also apply for victims of Ponzi-type investment schemes, which are outlined in Form 4684 instructions and IRS resources.
That’s where pig butchering scams can, in some cases, qualify. Because victims entered the transaction with the intent to invest and earn profit, they believed they were buying into what they thought was a legitimate crypto investment; the loss may be deductible as a theft loss.
In a recent 2025 memo, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Office of Chief Counsel recognized that certain scam victims may claim theft-loss deductions when the stolen funds resulted from fraud, and there was no reasonable prospect of recovery.
Did you know? According to the IRS’s recent guidance, victims of scams who thought they were investing for profit, such as in crypto, may deduct the loss in the year they discover the theft, so long as the loss is final and not likely to be recovered.
In March 2025, the IRS released a key memorandum (CCA 202511015) that sheds new light on the deductibility of scam losses. The memo examined several hypothetical scam-victim scenarios, including those involving crypto-investment fraud, and concluded that:
The recent IRS stance represents a tangible opening for crypto investors who lost everything to a scam. Still, these claims are highly fact-sensitive, the circumstances matter.
If you believe you may qualify for a theft-loss deduction after a pig butchering scam, here’s what to do:
If you lost money in a pig butchering crypto scam, there may be tax relief available. Under recent IRS guidance, theft losses from scams tied to profit-motivated investments can qualify for a deduction under § 165 if the loss is final, unrecovered, and well-documented.
At Powell Tax Law, we understand the stress and complexity that come with crypto fraud. If you are facing these circumstances, we can help you evaluate whether your loss qualifies, gather the right documentation, and guide you through filing.
Contact us today to see if you qualify. Let’s take the first step toward recovering what you lost.