South Korean lawmakers are once again tearing up the script on crypto taxation, this time with a proposal to scrap the levy altogether before it ever sees daylight.
South Korea Crypto Policy Shift Could Remove Tax Burden Entirely
According to the regional news publication Digital Asset, South Korea’s opposition party has introduced legislation to fully repeal a planned 22% tax on cryptocurrency gains, a policy that has already been delayed multiple times and is currently set to take effect Jan. 1, 2027.
The proposal, submitted March 19, 2026, marks the latest twist in a years-long saga that has seen regulators, politicians, and investors locked in a tug-of-war over how — or whether — to tax digital asset profits.
At the center of the debate is a flat tax structure first introduced in 2020–2021, which would impose a 20% national tax plus a 2% local tax on annual gains exceeding 2.5 million Korean won, roughly $1,700 to $1,900.
The policy has been anything but stable. Initially slated for rollout as early as 2022, it has since been postponed three times — first to 2023, then to 2025, and most recently to 2027 under the country’s 2025 Tax Reform Bill.
As of March 2026, crypto gains remain untaxed, leaving investors in a peculiar limbo where the rules are known, the infrastructure is being built, but the finish line keeps moving.
Enter the new bill from the People Power Party, spearheaded by Rep. Song Eon-seok, which seeks to delete all provisions related to digital asset taxation from the Income Tax Act — not delay, not revise, but erase.
The rationale reads like a checklist of longstanding grievances. Lawmakers argue that taxing crypto while scrapping broader financial investment taxes in 2024 creates an uneven playing field, effectively singling out digital asset investors for harsher treatment.
They also point to classification issues. With virtual assets treated as commodities domestically and, in some interpretations, by U.S. regulators, applying both value-added tax in certain cases and income tax could amount to double taxation — a concept that tends to make investors wince.
Then there is the practical side. Tracking acquisition costs, especially for foreign participants or assets moved across platforms, is no small feat, and critics say enforcement could become more theater than function.
Ironically, enforcement is already underway. South Korea’s National Tax Service is reportedly building a roughly 3 billion won AI-driven monitoring system designed to track transactions, detect evasion, and calculate gains, with a pilot expected in November 2026 and full deployment by year-end.
That raises an awkward question: What happens if the tax disappears just as the machinery to enforce it goes live?
For now, the repeal faces a steep political climb. The ruling Democratic Party has signaled it will review the bill but has not indicated strong internal momentum, leaving its fate dependent on cross-party alignment and broader legislative priorities.
If passed, the measure would remove one of the stricter crypto tax frameworks among major markets before it ever takes effect, potentially encouraging domestic trading activity and reducing regulatory friction.
If it fails, the clock resets to 2027, when investors could finally face a tax regime that has spent years in preview mode.
Either way, South Korea’s approach to crypto policy continues to evolve in fits and starts, reflecting a larger global tension between innovation, taxation, and the simple question of who pays — and when.
FAQ 🔎
- What is South Korea’s planned crypto tax?A 22% tax on annual crypto gains above 2.5 million won, scheduled for 2027.
- Why are lawmakers trying to repeal it?They argue it creates unfair treatment compared to other financial assets and may lead to double taxation.
- Is crypto currently taxed in South Korea?No, crypto gains remain untaxed as of March 2026.
- When will a final decision be made?The repeal bill must pass the National Assembly, with timing dependent on political negotiations.
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