---
title: "South Korea to Tax Crypto Gains Above $1,800 From 2027"
date: 2026-05-07
author: "Kathleen Kinder"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/south-korea-to-tax-crypto-gains-from-2027.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Cryptocurrency"
    url: "/crypto.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# South Korea to Tax Crypto Gains Above $1,800 From 2027

South Korea has officially confirmed that crypto investors earning more than $1,800 annually from digital assets will face a 22% tax starting January 2027.

## Key Takeaways

- South Korea will begin taxing crypto gains from January 2027 under the revised Income Tax Act.
- Annual crypto profits above 2.5 million won, around $1,800, will face a 22% combined tax.
- The National Tax Service is working with major exchanges like Upbit and Bithumb to prepare reporting systems.
- Officials rejected further delays despite ongoing political debate and industry concerns.

## What Happened?

South Korea’s Ministry of Economy and Finance has confirmed that the country’s long delayed crypto taxation framework will officially take effect in January 2027. The announcement came during a virtual asset taxation forum held at the National Assembly Members’ Office Building in Seoul.

Under the updated rules, profits generated through crypto trading, transfers, and lending activities will be treated as “other income” and taxed once annual gains exceed 2.5 million won, or roughly $1,800.

> JUST IN: South Korea confirms Bitcoin &amp; crypto tax rules will begin in January 2027.  
>   
> It imposes a 22% tax on gains exceeding $1,800.  
>   
>  -South Korea MOEF [pic.twitter.com/uWS6NpDgsy](https://t.co/uWS6NpDgsy)
> 
> — Bitcoin Archive (@BitcoinArchive) [May 7, 2026](https://twitter.com/BitcoinArchive/status/2052389651118276648?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## South Korea Moves Forward With Crypto Tax Plan

The latest announcement marks the clearest public confirmation yet that South Korea plans to proceed with [crypto taxation](https://coinlaw.io/crypto-taxation-laws-statistics/) after years of delays and political disagreements. The tax was originally expected to launch earlier but faced repeated postponements due to concerns surrounding exchange readiness, investor backlash, and administrative complexity.

Moon Kyung-ho, director of the ministry’s income tax division, confirmed the government’s position during the emergency parliamentary forum.

“**We will proceed with virtual asset taxation as scheduled in January next year,**” Moon stated during the session.

According to the Finance Ministry, investors earning profits above the 2.5 million won threshold will face a total 22% tax. This includes a **20% income tax** along with a **2% local income tax**.

Officials also clarified that crypto taxation will remain separate from broader financial investment income taxes. The ministry argued that the framework already has its own legal basis under amendments made to the Income Tax Act in 2020.

## Millions of Korean Crypto Investors Could Be Affected

The new rules are expected to impact approximately **13.26 million crypto investors** across South Korea, highlighting the scale of the country’s digital asset market.

South Korea remains one of the world’s most active [retail crypto trading markets](https://coinlaw.io/cryptocurrency-trading-regulations-statistics/), with platforms like Upbit and Bithumb handling significant trading volumes during major market cycles.

To prepare for the rollout, the **National Tax Service** has started working closely with the country’s largest crypto exchanges, including:

- **[Upbit](https://coinlaw.io/upbit-statistics/)**
- **Bithumb**
- **Coinone**
- **Korbit**
- **Gopax**

Authorities are currently developing operational guidelines and reporting standards that will help exchanges support taxable income calculations and transaction verification.

Officials stated that the detailed notice for the system is expected to go through legislative review during 2026 ahead of the official launch.

## Government Expands Focus Beyond Basic Trading

South Korean authorities are also preparing separate taxation standards for emerging crypto income categories. These reportedly include:

- **Staking rewards**
- **[Airdrops](https://coinlaw.io/token-airdrop-statistics/)**
- **Crypto lending income**

The government is also attempting to address concerns related to overseas trading platforms and [decentralized exchanges](https://coinlaw.io/decentralized-exchange-vs-centralized-exchange-statistics/).

Officials said transaction monitoring could be managed through foreign financial account reporting systems and the global Crypto Asset Reporting Framework, also known as CARF.

At the same time, debate surrounding the crypto tax has not disappeared entirely. The ruling People Power Party recently proposed legislation aimed at removing the tax before implementation. Industry groups have also raised concerns over growing compliance burdens tied to anti money laundering regulations and overseas transfer reporting requirements.

Some crypto firms warned that proposed AML reporting rules could increase suspicious transaction filings from around **63,000 cases to more than 5.4 million annually**, creating significant operational pressure for exchanges.

Despite these concerns, the Finance Ministry appears determined to move ahead unless lawmakers decide to revise the law once again before 2027.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

In my experience, South Korea has always been one of the most influential crypto markets globally, especially when it comes to retail investor activity. This move shows the government is no longer treating crypto as a temporary or fringe asset class. Instead, regulators are building a long term taxation and compliance framework around it.

I found it particularly important that authorities are already working directly with exchanges on reporting systems before the rollout. That preparation could help avoid the confusion and enforcement issues seen in other countries when crypto taxes were introduced too quickly. Still, the low taxable threshold may remain controversial among smaller retail traders who make up a huge part of Korea’s crypto ecosystem.

Definition of Staking. Link to full glossary entry follows the description.**Staking**Staking is the process of locking cryptocurrency in a proof-of-stake network to help validate transactions and earn rewards, replacing energy-intensive mining.

[Read more](https://coinlaw.io/glossary/staking/)