After three delays, two political battles, and years of industry pushback, it’s finally happening. South Korea has confirmed that a 22% tax on cryptocurrency profits will take effect on January 1, 2027.
The announcement came from Moon Kyung-ho, director of the income tax division at the Ministry of Economy and Finance, speaking at an emergency parliamentary forum on virtual asset taxation on May 7. His message was unambiguous: the tax will proceed as scheduled, regardless of ongoing political efforts to block it.
The tax applies to annual crypto profits above 2.5 million Korean won, roughly $1,800. That’s an extraordinarily low threshold. It means that virtually any active crypto trader in South Korea, not just whales or professionals, will be affected. An estimated 13.26 million investors fall within the scope of the new rules.
How the Tax Works
The structure is straightforward. Any annual profit from cryptocurrency trading, lending, or staking above the 2.5 million won threshold will be taxed at a combined rate of 22%. That breaks down to 20% national income tax plus 2% local income tax.
The tax covers more than just buying and selling. Profits from lending your crypto to others, earning staking rewards, and receiving airdrops all fall under the “other income” category and are subject to the same 22% rate.
For context, that $1,800 threshold is remarkably low compared to other countries. In the US, crypto is taxed as capital gains with the first $44,625 in annual income taxed at 0% for single filers. In Germany, crypto held for more than one year is completely tax-free. In the UK, there’s a £3,000 annual capital gains allowance before tax kicks in.
South Korea’s threshold means that even a modest trader who makes $2,000 in profit over the course of a year will owe the government $44 in crypto tax. That may not sound like much, but multiply it across 13 million investors and the administrative burden becomes enormous.
Why It Took This Long
This tax was originally supposed to take effect in 2025. It’s been delayed three times.
The first delay came amid concerns that exchanges didn’t have the technical infrastructure to track and report transactions accurately. The second delay was driven by political disagreement over whether the threshold was too low. The most recent delay pushed the start date to January 2027 after the ruling People Power Party argued that crypto shouldn’t face harsher treatment than stock investments.
In March 2026, the People Power Party introduced a bill to abolish the crypto tax entirely before it takes effect. The party argued that the rules create fairness issues, risk double taxation, and are being implemented before the National Tax Service has built adequate infrastructure.
The Finance Ministry dismissed those concerns. Moon argued that exempting crypto investors while salaried workers and business owners continue to pay taxes would undermine the principles of tax fairness. His position signals that the government views this as a matter of equity, not just revenue.
The bill to abolish the tax has not passed, and the Ministry’s May 7 statement makes clear it is proceeding independently of that legislative effort.
How Exchanges Are Preparing
The National Tax Service has been working directly with South Korea’s five largest exchanges: Upbit (operated by Dunamu), Bithumb, Coinone, Korbit, and Gopax. Together, these platforms handle the vast majority of crypto trading volume in the country.
The collaboration is focused on building the data reporting infrastructure needed to make the tax work in practice. Exchanges will need to track every taxable event, calculate cost basis for each user, and report that data to the tax authority. A draft notice outlining the exact mechanics is being prepared for legislative review sometime in 2026.
The challenge is massive. Crypto transactions are far more complex than stock trades. A single DeFi interaction can generate multiple taxable events. Cross-chain swaps, liquidity pool entries, staking reward distributions, and airdrop receipts all need to be classified, valued, and reported.
For the five major exchanges, building systems to handle this at scale will require significant investment. For users of decentralised exchanges and overseas platforms, the reporting burden could be even more complicated, as those transactions won’t be captured automatically by Korean exchanges.
The AML Rules That Could Make Things Even Harder
As if a new tax wasn’t enough, South Korea is simultaneously proposing changes to its anti-money laundering rules that have the crypto industry genuinely alarmed.
Under the proposed amendments, exchanges would be required to flag any overseas-linked transfer of 10 million won or more (approximately $720) as suspicious activity and report it to the Financial Intelligence Unit.
The industry association DAXA, which represents 27 registered virtual asset service providers, warned that this threshold would be catastrophic for compliance teams. The association estimated that the number of suspicious activity reports filed annually would jump from 63,000 to approximately 5.4 million, an 85-fold increase.
At that volume, the reports become meaningless. When everything is flagged as suspicious, nothing is. DAXA argued that the proposed threshold would overwhelm both exchanges and regulators, rendering the entire system impractical.
The Financial Services Commission has opened a public comment period on the AML changes, with final rules expected in July. The crypto industry is pushing hard for a higher threshold, but the government has shown little willingness to back down on either the tax or the AML front.
What This Means for South Korea’s Crypto Market
South Korea is one of the largest crypto markets in the world. The country regularly ranks in the top five for trading volume, and its retail investor base is among the most active globally. Upbit alone has over 13 million cumulative registered users.
The introduction of a 22% tax on profits as low as $1,800, combined with aggressive AML reporting requirements, could reshape how Korean investors approach crypto. Some analysts expect a migration of trading activity to overseas platforms or decentralised exchanges that fall outside the reach of Korean tax authorities. Others predict that casual traders will simply exit the market rather than deal with the compliance burden.
There’s also a competitive concern. As countries like the UAE, Singapore, and Switzerland maintain low or zero crypto taxes, South Korea risks pushing talent and capital to friendlier jurisdictions. The country already lost ground to Dubai and Singapore during the 2023-2024 exchange migration wave, and a punitive tax regime could accelerate that trend.
For now, the market has until January 2027 to prepare. That’s roughly seven months to set up tracking systems, understand the new rules, and adjust investment strategies accordingly. For 13 million Korean crypto investors, the clock is ticking.
FAQ
How much will South Korea tax crypto profits?
Starting January 1, 2027, South Korea will impose a 22% tax (20% national income tax plus 2% local tax) on annual cryptocurrency profits exceeding 2.5 million Korean won, approximately $1,800. The tax covers trading gains, lending income, staking rewards, and airdrops.
How many investors are affected?
An estimated 13.26 million investors based on cumulative exchange registration data fall within the scope of the new tax. The low threshold of $1,800 in annual profits means virtually any active trader will be subject to the rules.
Can South Korea still cancel the crypto tax?
The ruling People Power Party introduced a bill in March 2026 to abolish the tax before it takes effect. However, the Finance Ministry has explicitly stated it will proceed as scheduled regardless of that legislative effort. Unless the abolition bill passes before January 2027, the tax will go ahead.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or tax advice. Tax laws vary by jurisdiction. Always consult a qualified tax professional for advice specific to your situation.


















