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How To Export XXKK Trade History For Taxes And Audits
Taxes and audits don't care how clean your trading screen looked. They care about rows of records that explain every fill, fee, transfer, and balance change.
A proper XXKK trade history export gives you that trail. It also helps your accountant reconcile totals without guessing, which reduces back-and-forth later.
This guide walks through what to export on XXKK (spot and derivatives), how to download files in the current March 2026 web UI, and how to store and prepare them for tax software or audit review.
What a tax-ready XXKK export should include (not just "trades")
Many users export "orders" and stop there. For taxes and audits, you usually need the parts that move value, not the parts that show intent. In other words, fills beat orders.
Start by planning a complete set of exports:
Spot trade fills (executed trades): Time, pair, side, price, size, fees, trade ID.
Derivatives activity (if you trade perps): Executed trades, realized PnL, funding payments, and fees.
Wallet movement: Deposits, withdrawals, and internal transfers between accounts (spot to derivatives and back).
Other credits and debits: Rewards, rebates, or adjustments (if shown in your history views).
This is also where audit readiness begins. Auditors often test whether records can explain balance changes. That means your trade history alone is not enough if you moved assets in or out.
Audit tip: Export a few days before and after your tax year ends. Year-end timezone differences can push trades across the boundary.
XXKK is designed as a one-stop trading platform for spot and derivatives, but recordkeeping still depends on exporting the right categories. Keep the exports user-focused and consistent, then you'll have a file set that's easier to defend.
For a longer walkthrough that focuses on turning spot and futures exports into an import-ready file, use this internal reference: export XXKK trade history for taxes.
Step-by-step: XXKK trade history export on web (March 2026 UI)
In March 2026, most exports are easiest on the XXKK web platform. The mobile app can show history, but CSV export isn't always available on every screen.
Use this repeatable flow and document your settings as you go.
1) Choose one timezone and keep it for every export
Pick UTC or your local timezone. Then stick with it across spot, derivatives, and wallet reports. Mixed timezones create gaps and overlaps during imports.
Write down:
Timezone used
Date range
Account ID or UID label shown in your profile area (don't share it publicly)
Export type (spot fills, funding, deposits, etc.)
2) Export from "All Transactions" and the relevant history pages
On the web UI, many users find exports under Accounts or Wallet, then a history screen like All Transactions.
Log in on the XXKK website in a desktop browser.
Open Accounts or Wallet (menu position can vary by region).
Go to All Transactions (or the closest "history" page).
Filter by date range and transaction type (trades, fees, funding, deposits, withdrawals, transfers).
Select the instrument or market type if available (spot, derivatives).
Click Search to load results.
Click the Export icon (often a download arrow) and confirm CSV export.
3) Work within export limits (split large years into chunks)
As of March 2026, users commonly see limits such as:
Up to 180 days per export range
Up to about 65,000 records per file
Report generation that can take up to 2 days, with downloads available under an Export History area
If you trade actively, plan exports by quarter or month. Name files so they sort correctly, for example: XXKK_SpotFills_2025-01-01_to_2025-03-31_UTC.csv.
4) Don't forget derivatives details
If you trade perpetuals, you typically need separate exports for:
Executed trades
Realized PnL
Funding payments
Fees and liquidations (if shown)
Also export transfers between spot and derivatives so your balance movement makes sense later. If you can't reconcile spot vs derivatives balances, exports for transfers are often the missing link.
If you need a general benchmark for what an exchange export process looks like, Kraken's guide is a helpful comparison: how to export account history.
Prepare exports for tax tools and audits (clean, map, reconcile)
Once you have CSVs, treat them like original bank statements. Don't overwrite them. Instead, create a separate "working" copy for cleaning and merging.
Keep originals, plus an export log
For audit readiness, store:
The original CSV files (unchanged)
A short export log (date exported, filters, timezone, file name, record counts)
Any support tickets or notes if you requested older records
Store files securely. CSVs can contain wallet addresses, internal IDs, and other sensitive data. XXKK emphasizes strong security and privacy controls across its ecosystem, and you should mirror that approach by using encrypted storage and limiting who can access the files.
Map columns before you import
Most tax tools accept exchange CSVs, but they still need consistent fields. Use this meaning-based mapping instead of relying on exact header names.
A simple mapping reference:
XXKK export field (common)
Import field (common)
What to check
Time, Created Time, Executed At
Date/Time
Confirm timezone consistency
Symbol, Pair, Market
Asset/Pair
Split base and quote if needed
Side (Buy/Sell), Position
Type
Keep spot and derivatives distinct
Price, Fill Price
Price
Use one decimal format
Quantity, Executed Qty
Amount
Confirm base asset units
Fee, Trading Fee
Fee
Keep fee amount and fee currency
Trade ID, Order ID
Unique ID
Prevent duplicates during merges
After mapping, do a quick "sanity scan":
Fees are present on both buys and sells.
Derivatives funding appears as many small rows (that's normal).
Realized PnL lines exist for closes and liquidations (if applicable).
Reconcile with deposits, withdrawals, and transfers
Reconciliation is the part that makes audits boring, in a good way.
Check these three points:
Opening balance plus net activity equals closing balance (per asset, per account where possible).
Large deposits and withdrawals match your wallet records (tx hash, address, network).
Transfers between spot and derivatives explain "missing" funds during active trading periods.
If you want a practical reference on building consistent, defensible records (including cost basis workflows like FIFO), this internal resource can help: FIFO PnL calculation for VDA taxes.
Reminder: This article provides general recordkeeping guidance, not tax advice. Rules vary by country and situation, so confirm your approach with a qualified local tax professional.
Importing into common tax software (without locking into one tool)
Most tools follow the same pattern:
Upload spot fills first.
Upload wallet transactions (deposits, withdrawals, transfers).
Upload derivatives funding and realized PnL using the tool's "futures" or "income/expense" categories, if supported.
Review cost basis method settings and keep them consistent year to year.
If the tool can't classify funding or realized PnL cleanly, keep those files separate and provide them to your accountant as supporting schedules.
Conclusion
A clean XXKK trade history export is less about one CSV and more about a complete paper trail. Export fills, fees, funding, realized PnL, and wallet movements, then keep the originals unchanged. Document timezone and date ranges, reconcile balances, and store everything securely. When the numbers match and the files are organized, tax filing and audits become a process, not a panic.
12 मार्च 2026
शेयर करना:
विषयसूची
Taxes and audits don't care how clean your trading screen looked. They care about rows of records that explain every fill, fee, transfer, and balance change.
A proper XXKK trade history export gives you that trail. It also helps your accountant reconcile totals without guessing, which reduces back-and-forth later.
This guide walks through what to export on XXKK (spot and derivatives), how to download files in the current March 2026 web UI, and how to store and prepare them for tax software or audit review.

What a tax-ready XXKK export should include (not just "trades")
Many users export "orders" and stop there. For taxes and audits, you usually need the parts that move value, not the parts that show intent. In other words, fills beat orders.
Start by planning a complete set of exports:
- Spot trade fills (executed trades): Time, pair, side, price, size, fees, trade ID.
- Derivatives activity (if you trade perps): Executed trades, realized PnL, funding payments, and fees.
- Wallet movement: Deposits, withdrawals, and internal transfers between accounts (spot to derivatives and back).
- Other credits and debits: Rewards, rebates, or adjustments (if shown in your history views).
This is also where audit readiness begins. Auditors often test whether records can explain balance changes. That means your trade history alone is not enough if you moved assets in or out.
Audit tip: Export a few days before and after your tax year ends. Year-end timezone differences can push trades across the boundary.
XXKK is designed as a one-stop trading platform for spot and derivatives, but recordkeeping still depends on exporting the right categories. Keep the exports user-focused and consistent, then you'll have a file set that's easier to defend.
For a longer walkthrough that focuses on turning spot and futures exports into an import-ready file, use this internal reference: export XXKK trade history for taxes.
Step-by-step: XXKK trade history export on web (March 2026 UI)
In March 2026, most exports are easiest on the XXKK web platform. The mobile app can show history, but CSV export isn't always available on every screen.
Use this repeatable flow and document your settings as you go.
1) Choose one timezone and keep it for every export
Pick UTC or your local timezone. Then stick with it across spot, derivatives, and wallet reports. Mixed timezones create gaps and overlaps during imports.
Write down:
- Timezone used
- Date range
- Account ID or UID label shown in your profile area (don't share it publicly)
- Export type (spot fills, funding, deposits, etc.)
2) Export from "All Transactions" and the relevant history pages
On the web UI, many users find exports under Accounts or Wallet, then a history screen like All Transactions.
- Log in on the XXKK website in a desktop browser.
- Open Accounts or Wallet (menu position can vary by region).
- Go to All Transactions (or the closest "history" page).
- Filter by date range and transaction type (trades, fees, funding, deposits, withdrawals, transfers).
- Select the instrument or market type if available (spot, derivatives).
- Click Search to load results.
- Click the Export icon (often a download arrow) and confirm CSV export.
3) Work within export limits (split large years into chunks)
As of March 2026, users commonly see limits such as:
- Up to 180 days per export range
- Up to about 65,000 records per file
- Report generation that can take up to 2 days, with downloads available under an Export History area
If you trade actively, plan exports by quarter or month. Name files so they sort correctly, for example: XXKK_SpotFills_2025-01-01_to_2025-03-31_UTC.csv.
4) Don't forget derivatives details
If you trade perpetuals, you typically need separate exports for:
- Executed trades
- Realized PnL
- Funding payments
- Fees and liquidations (if shown)
Also export transfers between spot and derivatives so your balance movement makes sense later. If you can't reconcile spot vs derivatives balances, exports for transfers are often the missing link.
If you need a general benchmark for what an exchange export process looks like, Kraken's guide is a helpful comparison: how to export account history.
Prepare exports for tax tools and audits (clean, map, reconcile)
Once you have CSVs, treat them like original bank statements. Don't overwrite them. Instead, create a separate "working" copy for cleaning and merging.
Keep originals, plus an export log
For audit readiness, store:
- The original CSV files (unchanged)
- A short export log (date exported, filters, timezone, file name, record counts)
- Any support tickets or notes if you requested older records
Store files securely. CSVs can contain wallet addresses, internal IDs, and other sensitive data. XXKK emphasizes strong security and privacy controls across its ecosystem, and you should mirror that approach by using encrypted storage and limiting who can access the files.
Map columns before you import
Most tax tools accept exchange CSVs, but they still need consistent fields. Use this meaning-based mapping instead of relying on exact header names.
A simple mapping reference:
| XXKK export field (common) | Import field (common) | What to check |
|---|---|---|
| Time, Created Time, Executed At | Date/Time | Confirm timezone consistency |
| Symbol, Pair, Market | Asset/Pair | Split base and quote if needed |
| Side (Buy/Sell), Position | Type | Keep spot and derivatives distinct |
| Price, Fill Price | Price | Use one decimal format |
| Quantity, Executed Qty | Amount | Confirm base asset units |
| Fee, Trading Fee | Fee | Keep fee amount and fee currency |
| Trade ID, Order ID | Unique ID | Prevent duplicates during merges |
After mapping, do a quick "sanity scan":
- Fees are present on both buys and sells.
- Derivatives funding appears as many small rows (that's normal).
- Realized PnL lines exist for closes and liquidations (if applicable).
Reconcile with deposits, withdrawals, and transfers
Reconciliation is the part that makes audits boring, in a good way.
Check these three points:
- Opening balance plus net activity equals closing balance (per asset, per account where possible).
- Large deposits and withdrawals match your wallet records (tx hash, address, network).
- Transfers between spot and derivatives explain "missing" funds during active trading periods.
If you want a practical reference on building consistent, defensible records (including cost basis workflows like FIFO), this internal resource can help: FIFO PnL calculation for VDA taxes.
Reminder: This article provides general recordkeeping guidance, not tax advice. Rules vary by country and situation, so confirm your approach with a qualified local tax professional.
Importing into common tax software (without locking into one tool)
Most tools follow the same pattern:
- Upload spot fills first.
- Upload wallet transactions (deposits, withdrawals, transfers).
- Upload derivatives funding and realized PnL using the tool's "futures" or "income/expense" categories, if supported.
- Review cost basis method settings and keep them consistent year to year.
If the tool can't classify funding or realized PnL cleanly, keep those files separate and provide them to your accountant as supporting schedules.
Conclusion
A clean XXKK trade history export is less about one CSV and more about a complete paper trail. Export fills, fees, funding, realized PnL, and wallet movements, then keep the originals unchanged. Document timezone and date ranges, reconcile balances, and store everything securely. When the numbers match and the files are organized, tax filing and audits become a process, not a panic.
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