Blockpit Review (2026)
Our verdict: 4.2 / 5
Blockpit is one of the most polished crypto tax tools you can use, and the obvious landing spot if you're a refugee from Accointing — Blockpit absorbed it, so the data import and look-and-feel will feel familiar. It connects to hundreds of exchanges and wallets, classifies your transactions automatically, and spits out a clean, country-aware report at the end. UK users are supported and can produce figures to drop into a Self Assessment. The honest caveat is that Blockpit is European-led: its deepest, most lovingly maintained logic is for markets like Germany and Austria, and for the very thorniest HMRC edge cases (share-pooling, the 30-day bed-and-breakfasting rule, complex DeFi) a UK-first tool like Recap or Koinly can feel a touch more native. For most UK investors with a normal mix of exchange trades, though, Blockpit is fast, friendly and accurate — and it's software, not tax advice.
How it scores
👍 Pros
- Genuinely clean, modern interface that's a pleasure to use compared with most tax tools
- The natural home for ex-Accointing users — Blockpit absorbed it, so imports and workflow feel familiar
- Country-specific tax optimisation, with UK support and reports you can feed into Self Assessment
- Free tier lets you import, review and see your position before you ever pay
- Hundreds of exchange and wallet integrations with automatic transaction classification
- Annual licence model means one predictable price per tax year, not a per-export surprise
👎 Cons
- European-led: HMRC-specific edge cases (share pooling, the 30-day rule) are handled less deeply than a UK-first tool like Recap
- Complex DeFi and NFT histories may still need manual review before you trust the totals
- It's software, not advice — for a tricky tax position you'll still want an accountant
How it compares
| Feature | Blockpit | Koinly | CoinLedger |
|---|---|---|---|
| Our score | 4.2 | 4.5 | 4.2 |
| Free tier | Yes (view before you pay) | Yes (view before you pay) | Yes (view before you pay) |
| UK / HMRC report | Yes | Yes (UK-native) | Yes |
| Interface | Excellent, modern | Very good | Good |
| Best for Accointing refugees | Yes — direct successor | Migration possible | Migration possible |
| Pricing model | Annual licence | Per tax year | Per tax year |
| Best for | Clean UX & EU/UK users | UK-native accuracy | US-focused filers |
How we tested
The way we test any tax tool is to throw a messy, realistic transaction history at it and see whether the numbers come out right. With Blockpit we'd connect a spread of exchanges and wallets by API and CSV, import a year of spot trades, transfers, staking rewards and a few awkward DeFi interactions, then check how cleanly it classified everything and whether transfers between our own wallets were correctly treated as non-taxable. We'd generate the UK report and reconcile a sample of disposals by hand against HMRC's share-pooling rules to gauge accuracy, then test the Accointing import path to confirm old data carries over. Our scores weight accuracy and UK reporting most heavily, then ease of use and value. Blockpit doesn't see or influence our verdict.
FAQ
I used Accointing — should I switch to Blockpit?
Yes, this is the intended path. Blockpit acquired and absorbed Accointing, so it's built to be the successor: your historical data and the general way of working carry over, and the interface is even cleaner. If you were happy with Accointing, Blockpit is the most natural place to land.
Does Blockpit work for UK tax / HMRC?
Yes. Blockpit supports UK users and produces a report with the gains and income figures you need for Self Assessment. Just bear in mind it's a European-led tool, so for the gnarliest HMRC-specific rules a UK-native option like Recap or Koinly can feel slightly more at home — see our UK crypto tax guide for what to watch.
Is there a free version of Blockpit?
There's a free tier that lets you connect accounts, import your transactions and see your tax position before you commit. You typically only pay — via an annual licence — when you need to generate and download the full report for a given tax year, which means you can check the data quality first.